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Set 7 Problem number 1
How much paint is applied per square meter
if 10 gallons of paint are uniformly spread out over the surface of a sphere of radius 9.1
meters?
- If the paint is applied over a sphere of double
the radius, by what factor does the amount per square meter change?
- If the paint is applied over a sphere of four
times the radius, by what factor does the amount per square meter change?
If the paint is applied over a sphere of radius
13 meters, what is the factor by which the amount per square meter changes?
To find the number of gallons per square meter, we will divide the
number of gallons by the number of square meters.
- We know that we have 10 gallons.
- The area of a sphere of radius r is 4 `pi r ^ 2, so the known radius 9.1
meters implies area area of first sphere = 1040.623 m ^ 2.
- The number of gallons per square meter is therefore area density of paint
= 10 gallons / 1040.623 m ^ 2 = .0096 gal/m ^ 2.
When the radius is doubled the same amount of paint is spread over a
greater area. As shown below, a doubled radius implies a quadrupled area and
therefore 1/4 the density.
We could follow the previous procedure, using the doubled radius then
the quadrupled radius to obtain the gal/m ^ 2 amounts we need to calculate the desired
factors. However, it is more instructive to follow the following line of
reasoning:
- When the radius is doubled, the square of the radius increases by a
factor of 4.
- This increases the area by a factor of 4, since the area 4 `pi r^2 is
proportional to the square of the radius r.
- The paint is therefore spread out over 4 times the area, and the amount
per unit of area (the density), which is inversely proportional to the area, therefore
changes by a factor of 1/4 = .25.
- The amount per unit area will therefore become
- density on second sphere = .25 ( .0096 gal/m ^ 2) = .0024 gallons/m ^ 2.
- Similarly, when the radius is quadrupled, the square of the radius will
increase by a factor of 16.
- The amount per unit area will therefore be 1/16 of the original amount,
which is a factor of 1/16 = .0625.
- The amount per unit area will be
- density on third sphere = 1/16 ( .0096) gal/m^2 = .0006 gal/m^2.
- Finally, if the radius is 13 meters, this radius will be in a ratio
( 13/ 9.1) with the first sphere, so that the square of the radius will be ( 13/ 9.1) ^ 2 times
that of the first sphere.
- It follows that the amount per square meter will be 1/( 13/ 9.1) ^ 2 = .49
times as great as on the first sphere.
- This results in density on final sphere = .0096/( 13/ 9.1) ^ 2 gal/m ^ 2 =
.0047 gal/m ^ 2.
- This density is .49 times the original amount per square meter.
The surface density of any quantity Q spread over area A is Q / A.
- Therefore if a quantity Q is spread over the surface of a sphere of radius r, is
is spread over area A = 4 `pi r^2 and therefore has surface density `sigma = Q / (4 `pi
r^2).
- Note: `sigma is the Greek letter often used to designate surface density.
The symbol for `sigma is s
(may appear as small s on browsers which lack character set).
If the same quantity Q is spread over two spheres, one with radius r1 and the
other with radius r2, the two surface densities are
- `sigma1 = Q / (4 `pi r1^2)
and
- `sigma2 = Q / (4 `pi r2^2).
The ratio of surface densities is therefore
- `sigma2 / `sigma1 = [ Q / (4 `pi r2^2) ] / [ Q / (4 `pi r1^2) ] = (r1 / r2)^2.
- This ratio (r1 / r2) ^ 2 is the reciprocal square of the ratio of the radii.
- We therefore say that the surface density is inversely proportional to the radius
of the sphere.
The figure below depicts two spheres with radii r1 and r2.
- Their areas are 4 `pi r1^2 and 4 `pi r2^2, so the area ratio is (r2 / r1) ^ 2, as
indicated.
- Any quantity spread over the larger sphere will be spread more thinly than the
same quantity over the smaller, with a area density ratio which is the inverse of the area
ratio.
- The area density ratio will therefore be (r1 / r2) ^ 2.
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