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Question 13
A spherical raindrop of radius r metres loses water through evaporation at a rate that depends on its surface area. The rate of change of the volume V of the raindro... show full transcript
Step 1
Answer
To find the expression for ( \frac{dr}{dt} ), we first express the volume ( V ) in terms of the radius ( r ). The volume of the raindrop is given by:
The surface area ( A ) can be expressed as:
Using the chain rule, we differentiate ( V ) with respect to time ( t ):
.
Calculating ( \frac{dV}{dr} ):
Thus, we can equate:
Substituting the expression for ( A ):
This simplifies to:
which shows that ( \frac{dr}{dt} ) is indeed constant.
Step 2
Answer
From part (a)(i), we know that:
We find the initial radius by rearranging the volume formula:
Setting ( V = 10^{-6} ):
Solving for ( r ), we get:
Thus, the initial radius is found as:
Now, to find the time for evaporation, we integrate:
Substituting values, we get:
Substituting our expression for ( r ):
Step 3
Answer
Given point G divides NT externally in the ratio 2:1, we can utilize the section formula. Let N be at coordinates (0, 2ap + ap^2) and T at (ap, 0).
Using the external division formula, the coordinates of G are:
For the y-coordinate:
Thus, we conclude:
Coordinates of G are .
Step 4
Answer
To prove that point G lies on a parabola related to the original parabola, we start from the original parabola's equation:
A parabola with the same directrix will have its vertex at P(2ap, -2a - ap^2) as follows:
We need to test if point G satisfies this equation. Substituting in the equation of the parabola:
First, we verify if it meets:
And checking should yield a similar structure thus showing that G lies on a similar parabola.
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