EudecioGabriel Posted April 29, 2017 Posted April 29, 2017 I'm trying to use Integrals, what do you think? But this exercice is from Vectors and Analitic Geometry PDF, do you have another way of solving it? And I just can not find the center... can you help me?
DrKrettin Posted April 29, 2017 Posted April 29, 2017 Try a linear substitution so 3x' = 3x + a and choose "a" so that the 72x term disappears. Then do the same for y
Country Boy Posted May 2, 2017 Posted May 2, 2017 First, "9 x^2 + 9y^2 + 72 x − 12 y + 103 = 0" is the equation of a curve in the xy-plane and nether has an "area". I presume you mean "find the area of the disk bounded by the circle described by 9 x^2 + 9y^2 + 72 x − 12 y + 103 = 0". The first thing I would do is complete the squares in both x and y to write this in "standard form": 9(x^2- 8x+ 16)+ 9(y^2- (4/3)y+ 4/9)= -103+ 144+ 4= 45. That is the same as (x- 4)^2+ (y- 2/3)^2= 5. That is a circle with center at (4, 2/3) and radius sqrt(5). Knowing the radius of the circle it is not necessary to do any integration. Its area is 5pi.
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