Calculus: Early Transcendentals 8th Edition

Published by Cengage Learning
ISBN 10: 1285741552
ISBN 13: 978-1-28574-155-0

Chapter 16 - Section 16.2 - Line Integrals - 16.2 Exercise - Page 1085: 31

Answer

$\dfrac{172,704}{5,632,705}\sqrt 2(1-e^{-14\pi})$

Work Step by Step

Here, we have $ds=\sqrt{(dx/dt)^2+(dy/dt)^2+(dz/dt)^2}$ Now, we have $ds=\sqrt{(-e^{-t}\cos 4t-4e^{-t} \sin 4t)^2+(-e^{-t}\sin 4t-4e^{-t} \cos 4t)^2+(-e^{-t})^2}dt$ or, $ds=(e^{-t}) \sqrt {18} dt$ $\int_{C} x^2y^2zds=\int_{0}^{2 \pi} (-e^{-t}\cos 4t)^3 \times (e^{-t}) (\sqrt {18} dt)$ Using the calculator, we get $\int_{C} x^2y^2zds=\dfrac{172,704}{5,632,705}\sqrt 2(1-e^{-14\pi})$
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