Sketch the region R of a lamina which is bounded by the curve y=sqrt*(1-x^2) in the first quadrant.

2 views (last 30 days)
y=sqrt*(1-x^2) figure

Accepted Answer

Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 9 Dec 2016
What is a lamina? What defines "the first quadrant"? What range of x do you want to make y for? You can't sketch anything meaningful if x goes from -infinity to +infinity. What range of x do you want to use? Maybe -2 to 2 for example
x = linspace(-2, 2, 500);
y=sqrt(1-x.^2) ;
plot(x, y, 'b-', 'LineWidth', 2);
xlabel('x', 'FontSize', 24);
ylabel('y', 'FontSize', 24);
grid on;
If you wanted x to be only in the first quadrant, what would you have to change in the code?
  2 Comments
sensei
sensei on 9 Dec 2016
Edited: sensei on 9 Dec 2016
if function of the lamina is given by delta(x,y)=cos(x.^2+y.62). how to set up the double integral to find Cartesian coordinates. can you help me? this has related to this question.
Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 9 Dec 2016
Edited: Image Analyst on 9 Dec 2016
You didn't answer my question yet. What is a lamina? To me it means a layer but I don't know how it applies in your context of plotting a math equation. I also don't know how a double integral would be involved in your latest equation. You could make a 2D array called delta using meshgrid and then use imshow() to display delta as an image. Do you want that? That's not using a double integral though.
x = linspace(-pi, pi, 500);
y = linspace(-pi, pi, 500);
[X, Y] = meshgrid(x, y);
delta = cos(X.^2+Y.^2);
imshow(delta, []);

Sign in to comment.

More Answers (0)

Categories

Find more on Earth and Planetary Science in Help Center and File Exchange

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!