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When changing an integral to polar coordinates, DxDy becomes rDrDtheta. Can anyone give a satisfying explanation for where this r comes from?

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User Gameweld
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1 Answer

5 votes
"The differential dx dy represents an element of area in cartesian coordinates, with the domain of integration extending over the entire xy-plane. An alternative representation of the last integral can be expressed in plane polar coordinates r, θθ"
answered
User Nrjohnstone
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7.7k points
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