How do you use polar coordinates to evaluate the integral which gives the area that lies in the first quadrant between the circles #x^2+y^2=36# and #x^2-6x+y^2=0#?

1 Answer
Feb 16, 2015

Hello !

Do you really need integrals to calculate these aera ? Maybe I did not understand your problem, but the aera is easy :

#\mathcal{A} = \frac{1}{4}\pi\cdot 6^2 - \frac{1}{2}\pi\cdot 3^2 = \frac{9}{2}\pi#.

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Explanations.

1) The area of a circle of radius #R# is #\pi R^2#.

Here you have to calculate area of #1/4# of circle of radius 6 (so, #\frac{1}{4}\pi\cdot 6^2#) and area of half circle of radius 3 (so, \frac{1}{2}\pi\cdot 3^2).

2) The equation #x^2+y^2=36# represents the circle of radius #\sqrt{36} = 6# and center #O(0,0)#.

The equation #x^2-6x+y^2=0# is too #(x-3)^2+ y^2=9#, therefore it represents the circle of radius #\sqrt{9}=3# and center #I(3,0)#.

Remark. #(x-a)^2 + (y-b)^2 = r^2# (with #r>0#) represents the circle of radius #r# and center #I(a,b)#.