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Question: A stone dropped into a pond of still water sends out concentric circular waves from the point of dis...

A stone dropped into a pond of still water sends out concentric circular waves from the point of disturbance of water at the rate of 4 cm/sec. Find the rate of change of disturbed area at the instant when the radius of the wave ring is 15 cm.

Explanation

Solution

The derivative of Y with respect to X, written dydx\dfrac{{dy}}{{dx}}, is just a description of how fast Y changes when X changes. It so happens that if Y=XNY = {X^N}, then dydx=NXN1\dfrac{{dy}}{{dx}} = N{X^{N - 1}}. So, for example, if Y=5X3Y = 5{X^3}, then dydx=15X2\dfrac{{dy}}{{dx}} = 15{X^2}. The area of a circle is πr2\pi {r^2}, and the circumference is 2πr2\pi r, which is the derivative.
Chain rule:
To differentiate y = f(g(x)), let u = g(x). Then y = f(u) and
dydx = dydu × dudx\dfrac{{dy}}{{dx}}{\text{ }} = {\text{ }}\dfrac{{dy}}{{du}}{\text{ }} \times {\text{ }}\dfrac{{du}}{{dx}}

Complete step-by-step answer:
Let the radius of the ring be r
So, according to question
Radius, r = 15 cm
If the radius is increasing at a constant rate of, drdt=4cm/sec\dfrac{{dr}}{{dt}} = 4cm/\sec
Let area be A=πr2A = \pi {r^2}…………………………(1)
Differentiating the equation (1) with respect to, dAdt=2πr×drdt\dfrac{{dA}}{{dt}} = 2\pi r \times \dfrac{{dr}}{{dt}}
So, Rate of change of disturbed area = dAdt=2πr×drdt\dfrac{{dA}}{{dt}} = 2\pi r \times \dfrac{{dr}}{{dt}}

dAdt=2π(15)×(4) dAdt=376.99cm2/sec  \Rightarrow \dfrac{{dA}}{{dt}} = 2\pi \left( {15} \right) \times \left( 4 \right) \\\ \Rightarrow \dfrac{{dA}}{{dt}} = 376.99c{m^2}/\sec \\\

The rate of change of disturbed area is 376.99cm2/sec376.99c{m^2}/\sec at the instant when the radius of the wave ring is 15 cm.

Note: dydx\dfrac{{dy}}{{dx}} is positive if y increases as x increases and is negative if y decreases as x increases. The same “derivative thing” holds up for the circumference vs. the area of a circle. The change in area, dAdA, is dA=(2πr)dRdA = (2\pi r)dR. So,dAdR=2πr\dfrac{{dA}}{{dR}} = 2\pi r. That is, the derivative of the area is just the circumference.