Arc length for lines
So this is about calculating the length of the line on a curve, not the area underneath.
The formula is:
This is because we’re actually calculating the hypotenuse of a triangle with height and width . This is only an approximation until we can get x or y isolated.
To do that isolation, we can pull out the dx^2 param.
The Mean Value Theorem of Differentiation says that , so we can substitute that, which gives us:
assuming f is differentiatable on [a,b] and f’ is continuous on [a,b]
Example
7.4.1 arc length of f(x) = x^{3/2} from 0 ⇐> 4 …
I’m not entirely sure why the book puts this at .
- DONE Completed: 2022-06-01
I don’t know where the 4/9 comes from. I know it’s probably something to do with the chain rule, but not clear on the specifics.
So it seems like they’re doing a u-substitution of u=1+9/4x, but this means du = 9/4 dx. To make that equal out.. we have to multiply the whole thing by 4/9th.
Arc length for circles circumfrence of a circle is:
for the top half: