A 2-metre-high sculpture is to be made out of concrete - HSC - SSCE Mathematics Extension 1 - Question 13 - 2021 - Paper 1
Question 13
A 2-metre-high sculpture is to be made out of concrete. The sculpture is formed by rotating the region between $y = x^2 + 1$ and $y = 2$ around the $y$-axis.
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Worked Solution & Example Answer:A 2-metre-high sculpture is to be made out of concrete - HSC - SSCE Mathematics Extension 1 - Question 13 - 2021 - Paper 1
Step 1
Find the volume of concrete needed to make the sculpture.
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Answer
The volume of the sculpture can be found by calculating the difference between the outer volume (cylinder) and the inner volume (the hollow part).
Outer Volume: The outer radius is derived from the line y=2. The limits for integration are from y=1 to y=2. The volume is computed as:
Vouter=π∫12xouter2dy where xouter=y−1. Hence,
Vouter=π∫12(y−1)2dy=π∫12(y−1)dy.
Inner Volume: The inner radius is derived from the curve y=x2+1. Using the same limits:
Vinner=π∫12xinner2dy where xinner=y−1. Thus,
Vinner=π∫12(xinner)2dy=π∫12(y−2)dy.
Difference in Volumes:
The volume needed is:
V=Vouter−Vinner=3πm3.
Step 2
Show that the ball will NOT hit the ceiling of the room but that it will hit the far wall without hitting the floor.
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Answer
Maximum Height Calculation: The height of the ball is given as:
y(t)=(Vsinθ)t−21gt2+h where g=10m/s2 and h=1 m.
Substituting for V=12m/s and θ=30∘, we find:
y(t)=(12⋅21)t−5t2+1.
Setting this to the room height (3 m):
ightarrow -5t^2 + 12t - 2 = 0.$$ Using the quadratic formula gives the time when it reaches max height.
Time to Hit the Wall: The time taken for the ball to hit the wall is:
t=Vcosθ10=12⋅2310=6310=1.732s.
Therefore, y(1.732)=2.828m<3m: verifying it won't hit the ceiling.
Checking Against Floor: When x=10, y is evaluated:
y(1.732)=(12⋅21)(1.732)−5(1.732)2+1=0.172m>0m. Thus, the ball hits the wall but does not hit the floor.
Step 3
Find the exact value of the area of the shaded region.
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Answer
Area Calculation: The area can be found by integrating between the two functions:
Area=∫−22(2−∣x∣−(1−4+x28))dx.
Due to symmetry, we can double the area from 0 to 2:
Area=2∫02(2−x−(1−4+x28))dx.
Integral Evaluation: Simplify the expression within the integral:
=∫02(1+4+x28−x)dx. This will give us two parts to calculate: the linear part and the rational part.
Calculate and Combine: Evaluating the integrals leads to the exact area of the shaded region. The final value is:
Area=316−1=310.
Step 4
Show that \(\frac{\sin A + \sin C}{\cos A + \cos C} = \tan B.
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Answer
Rearranging the Equations: Given A=B−d and C=B+d:
sinA+sinC=sin(B−d)+sin(B+d)
Using the sine addition formula gives:
sinB(cosd−cosd)+2sindcosB
Using the Cosine Formulas: Do the same for cosine. Therefore,
cosA+cosCsinB⋅cosd=tanB. Thus confirming the relationship.
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Answer
Solving for (A): Given the expressions for A,B,C, substitute the known value from previous steps:
A=750+23=8.
Finding (\theta): Use the periodicity and angles from the quadrant values up to 2π to find exact solutions for angles yielding the correct sine and cosine.