frederick Posted April 28, 2009 Share Posted April 28, 2009 Ah, I used to be able to do this easily but I really have forgot by now... Say you have a sphere with radius 10, you are drilling out a hole along the diameter with a radius of 3 inches... Find the volume of what's left of the sphere... So the way I thought to do it was just y = sqrt(100-x^2) in range y>3 rotated around x axis, but I really did forget how to write this... It was something like [math]pi \int^{10}_{3}(100-x^2)[/math]? Merged post follows: Consecutive posts mergedActually, sorry for wasting your time, that seems to be about right. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hermanntrude Posted May 2, 2009 Share Posted May 2, 2009 (edited) there's a quicker way to answer this without calculus, too: mathworld says that the volume of a spherical ring is equal to [math]V = \frac{4}{3}(r^2-R^2)^\frac{3}{2}[/math] where r is the radius of the drilled hole and R is the radius of the sphere Interestingly you can also get the volume of the spherical ring knowing only the length of the hole: [math] V = \frac{1}{6}\pi L^3[/math] where L is the length of the hole (measured after drilling... in other words not including the depth of the spherical caps.) Edited May 2, 2009 by hermanntrude Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bignose Posted May 3, 2009 Share Posted May 3, 2009 Interestingly you can also get the volume of the spherical ring knowing only the length of the hole: [math] V = \frac{1}{6}\pi L^3[/math] where L is the length of the hole (measured after drilling... in other words not including the depth of the spherical caps.) Just a quick note here that be sure to go to that Mathworld link and look at the specific definition of L. (Not that I am blaming you herman, because you got it from the webpage, but what I thought was L from "length of the hole" was NOT what L actually was!) The diagram on the Mathworld site cleared it up quite a bit for me. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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