N nahi11 Member Joined Mar 28, 2011 Messages 131 Gender Male HSC 2012 Feb 20, 2012 #1 Hi, Can anyone please help me with this question. For (a) I get A = pi*r^2 + pi(k - r)^2 For (b) I get A'=2pi * (2r-k) Therefore r= k/2 After that I know I am supposed to test either using the table or double differentiation but I seem to get stuck. Thanks Last edited: Feb 20, 2012
Hi, Can anyone please help me with this question. For (a) I get A = pi*r^2 + pi(k - r)^2 For (b) I get A'=2pi * (2r-k) Therefore r= k/2 After that I know I am supposed to test either using the table or double differentiation but I seem to get stuck. Thanks
Carrotsticks Retired Joined Jun 29, 2009 Messages 9,494 Gender Undisclosed HSC N/A Feb 20, 2012 #2 Find the double derivative, which is 4pi. However, this is a constant greater than zero, so the stationary point is a minimum. Hence r=k/2 yields a minimum. Therefore 2r = k, implying that r_1 = r_2. It follows that the two circles are congruent.
Find the double derivative, which is 4pi. However, this is a constant greater than zero, so the stationary point is a minimum. Hence r=k/2 yields a minimum. Therefore 2r = k, implying that r_1 = r_2. It follows that the two circles are congruent.
N nahi11 Member Joined Mar 28, 2011 Messages 131 Gender Male HSC 2012 Feb 20, 2012 #3 Lol damm I knew it. Thanks! REp+ Last edited: Feb 20, 2012