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Today's calculation of Integral 501
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kunny
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#1
Today's calculation of Integral 501
Tokyo Institute of Technology Admission Office entrance exam/Science II-2 2009/11/01

Find the volume of the uion A\cup B\cup C of the three subsets A,\ B,\ C in xyz space such that:

A=\{(x,\ y,\ z)\ |\ |x|\leq 1,\ y^2+z^2\leq 1\}
B=\{(x,\ y,\ z)\ |\ |y|\leq 1,\ z^2+x^2\leq 1\}
C=\{(x,\ y,\ z)\ |\ |z|\leq 1,\ x^2+y^2\leq 1\}
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Today's calculation of Integral Digest

PostPosted: Tue Nov 03, 2009 9:05 am  Back to top 
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kenn4000
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#2
if you add eight chunks of equal size you can make A\cup B \cup C into a sphere of radius \sqrt 2

so whats missing?

\int_1^{\sqrt 2} \pi(2-\sqrt x)^2dx= \pi \int_1^ {\sqrt 2} 4-4\sqrt x +x dx

=\pi (4(\sqrt 2-1)-\frac{8}{3} (2^{\frac{3}{4}}-1)+\frac{1}{2})

eight of these totals to \frac{\pi}{3}(96\sqrt{2}-64\cdot 2^{\frac{3}{4}}-20)

so the area of the shape is.. \frac{4\pi}{3}2^{\frac{3}{2}}-\frac{\pi}{3}(96\sqrt{2}-64\cdot 2^{\frac{3}{4}}-20)


but thats like.. 3.7.. which is less than the unit sphere.. which is clearly a subset.. something went wrong

PostPosted: Wed Nov 04, 2009 12:16 am  Back to top 
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atomicwedgie
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#3
This is not the correct answer, since clearly the result must be greater than 2\pi. See the next post.

It is easier to first find the intersection I = A \cap B \cap C then compute |A \cup B \cup C| = |A| + |B| + |C| - 3|I|.

the solid I looks like a rhombic dodecahedron with curved faces. Six fourfold vertices are located at at the points (\pm 1, 0, 0), (0, \pm 1, 0), and (0, 0, \pm 1). Eight threefold vertices are located (\pm 2^{ - 1/2}, \pm 2^{ - 1/2}, \pm 2^{ - 1/2}).

Thus I is composed of a cube centered at the origin with faces parallel to the axes with edge length \sqrt {2}, and six rounded "pyramidal caps" each of whose volumes is further subdivided in eight congruent parts.

We calculate the volume of one of these parts:

|V| = \int_{x = 0}^{1/\sqrt {2}} \int_{y = 0}^x \sqrt {1 - x^2} - \frac {1}{\sqrt {2}} \, dy \, dx

= - \frac {1}{4\sqrt {2}} + \int_{x = 0}^{1/\sqrt {2}} \int_{y = 0}^x \sqrt {1 - x^2} \, dy \, dx

= - \frac {1}{4\sqrt {2}} + \int_{x = 0}^{1/\sqrt {2}} x \sqrt {1 - x^2} \, dx

= - \frac {1}{4\sqrt {2}} - \frac {1}{2} \int_{u = 1}^{1/2} \sqrt {u} \, du

= - \frac {1}{4\sqrt {2}} + \frac {1}{2} \left[ \frac {2}{3} u^{3/2} \right]_{u = 1/2}^1

= - \frac {1}{4\sqrt {2}} + \frac {1}{3} \left(1 - \frac {1}{2\sqrt {2}}\right) = \frac {8 - 5\sqrt {2}}{24}.

Hence

|I| = 48 |V| + 2 \sqrt {2} = 2(8 - 5\sqrt {2}) + 2\sqrt {2} = 16 - 8\sqrt {2} = 8(2 - \sqrt {2}).

Since |A| = |B| = |C| = 2\pi, it follows that |A \cup B \cup C| = 6(\pi - 4(2 - \sqrt {2})).
Last edited by atomicwedgie on Wed Nov 04, 2009 3:54 am; edited 1 time in total 
PostPosted: Wed Nov 04, 2009 3:21 am  Back to top 
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atomicwedgie
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#4
I think I made an error in my assumption about how the union A \cup B \cup C is constructed.

Instead of using the previous approach, we will calculate the volume T enclosed in the ( + , + , + ) octant enclosed by the surfaces z = 1, y^2 + z^2 = 1, x^2 + y^2 = 1, and x = y.

|T| = \int_{y = 0}^{1/\sqrt {2}} \int_{x = y}^{\sqrt {1 - y^2}} 1 - \sqrt {1 - y^2} \, dx \, dy

= \int_{y = 0}^{1/\sqrt {2}} (1 + y)\sqrt {1 - y^2} + y^2 - y - 1 \, dy

= \int_{y = 0}^{1/\sqrt {2}} \sqrt {1 - y^2} \, dy - \frac {1}{2}\int_{u = 1}^{1/2} \sqrt {u} \, du + \left[\frac {y^3}{3} - ...

= \frac {\pi}{8} - \frac {1}{\sqrt {2}} + \frac {1}{3}.

32 of these, plus the volume of a single cylinder, gives the desired result:

6\pi - 16\sqrt {2} + \frac {32}{3}.

PostPosted: Wed Nov 04, 2009 3:49 am  Back to top 
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kunny
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#5
Regrettably I can't receive the correct answer. Sad
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Today's calculation of Integral Digest

PostPosted: Thu Nov 05, 2009 6:50 pm  Back to top 
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J.Y.Choi
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#6
answer

8(2-\sqrt{2}).

PostPosted: Fri Nov 06, 2009 8:41 am  Back to top 
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kunny
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#7
Incorrect.
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Today's calculation of Integral Digest

PostPosted: Fri Nov 06, 2009 8:46 am  Back to top 
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J.Y.Choi
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#8
Ah, I didn't read the question correctly. 8(2-\sqrt{2}) is the volume of the 'intersection' of A,B,C.

PostPosted: Fri Nov 06, 2009 11:05 am  Back to top 
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atomicwedgie
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#9
kunny wrote:
Regrettably I can't receive the correct answer. Sad


Ah, the correct calculation is far simpler than I had thought. The easiest approach is to consider the volume of the region

R = \{(x,y,z) : 0 \le x , y, z \le 2, x^2 + y^2 > 1, y^2 + z^2 > 1, z^2 + x^2 > 1\}.

Then the desired volume is 8(1-|R|).

We have

|R| = 2 \int_{x = 1/\sqrt{2}}^1 \int_{y = \sqrt{1-x^2}}^x 1 - \sqrt{1-y^2} \, dy \, dx

=1+\sqrt{2}-\frac{3\pi}{4}.

Hence the desired volume is 2(3\pi-4\sqrt{2}).

PostPosted: Fri Nov 06, 2009 10:56 pm  Back to top 
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kunny
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#10
That's correct. Very Happy
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Today's calculation of Integral Digest

PostPosted: Sat Nov 07, 2009 2:03 am  Back to top 
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