Worksheets/Archimdes Dont Disturb My Circles
From charlesreid1
Instructions
As the lecture progresses, complete the questions and fill in the blanks. At the end of the lecture, you will have 10 minutes for a discussion of the lecture materials.
Background
During today's lecture you will be learning about Archimedes, one of the greatest mathematical minds of all time. During the lecture we will cover Archimedes' method for finding the surface area and volume of a cylinder and sphere.
It took Archimedes his entire life to discover these formulas, and he was so proud of them that he had a picture of a sphere inscribed with a cylinder, and the formula for the volume of a sphere, carved into his headstone. In the 13th century, Archimedes' works were translated into Latin, opening them up to study by Europeans. The invention of the calculus, arguably the next significant advance in mathematical thinking, would not occur until nearly 2,000 years later.
Today we are going to cover 2,000 years of mathematics in 30 minutes.
Lecture Topics
Starting point: Circumference of a circle. Magical mystery number pi. Desert island.
Part 0: Who was Archimedes
- Born in Syracuse, lived around 250 BC
- Give me a lever and I can move the world
- Density, water screw, fire ships
- Spirals, curves, method of exhaustion (limit without the concept of infinity), logarithms
- Integral of parabola
- Volume of a sphere
- Surface area of a sphere
Part 1: How to obtain the area of a circle from the circumference of a circle (via integration)
- Start with a circle, and no other information than the definition of pi: "pi is defined as the ratio of the circumference of the circle to the diameter of the circle:
$ \pi = \frac{C}{D} = \frac{C}{2R} $
To obtain an area, imagine a very thin circular strip, width dr, one side is length C(r) (circumference of r), other side is C(r+dr), circumference at r + dr. Sum up all these strips to get area approximation:
$ A \approx \sum_{i=1}^{n} C(r) \Delta r $
Now use infinite strips:
$ A = \lim_{n \rightarrow \infty} \sum_{i=1}^{n} C(r^{\star}) \Delta r = \lim_{n \rightarrow \infty} \sum_{i=1}^{n} 2 \pi r^{\star} \Delta r $
This is the definition of the integral. The limits of integration are for circle radii from 0 to R:
$ A = \int_{0}^{R} 2 \pi r dr $
which, on integrating, yields the area of a circle.
$ A = 2 \pi \left( \frac{r^2}{2} \right) \bigg|_{0}^{R} = \pi R^2 $
Part 2: How to obtain the volume of a sphere from the area of a circle (via disk method)
Part 3: How to obtain the surface area of a sphere from the volume of a sphere (via differentiation)
Questions
1) Where and when did Archimedes live?
2) What is the integral that relates the circumference of a circle to the area of a circle?
3) Mr. Blue is applying the disk method to compute the volume of a sphere with radius R. Mr. Blue takes a slice of the sphere to form a disk with a width of %DELTA x and a cross-sectional area of %pi R^2. Mr. Blue then computes the area of the sphere using the integral int from{0} to{R} {%pi R^2 dx}, thus yielding the volume of a sphere of %pi R^3. What conceptual error did Mr. Blue make?
4) Write the integral equation for a volume using the most general expression for the area A(x) as a function of location.
Equations: write the following formulas.
5) Circumference of a circle with radius R?
6) Area of a circle with radius R?
7) Volume of a sphere with radius R?
8) Surface area of a sphere with radius R?
9) Volume of a cylinder with radius R and height R?
10) Surface area of a cylinder with radius R and height R?
Links
http://www.historyofinformation.com/expanded.php?id=3289
Flags
Link to all worksheets idea list: Worksheets
Calc II:
- Archimedes: Don't Disturb my Circles Worksheets/Archimdes_Dont_Disturb_My_Circles
- Simpson's Rule: Worksheets/Simpsons_Rule
- Civil Engineering Road Planning: Worksheets/Civil_Engineering_Road_Planning
- Euler's Method and Circuits: Worksheets/Eulers_Method_Circuits
Calc III:
- Infinite Series: Worksheets/Infinite_Series_Convergence
- Partial derivatives: Worksheets/Van Der Waal Equation Critical Point