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3 votes
Consider a circle (radius R) to be made up of many concentric rings of radius r and thickness dr. Find the area, dA, of one of these rings and integrate from 0 to R to get the area of the circle. Remember, the area of a very thin ring is just the circumference times the thickness. For something a bit more challenging, try to set it up as a sum of thin parallel bars rather than a sum of rings.

asked
User Mmoment
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7.9k points

1 Answer

5 votes

Answer:

A = πR^2

Explanation:

Please refer to the attachment for explanation.

Consider a circle (radius R) to be made up of many concentric rings of radius r and-example-1
answered
User Azro
by
8.3k points
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