QUESTION IMAGE
Question
when the area in square units of an expanding circle is increasing twice as fast as its radius in linear units, the radius is
Step1: Recall the formula for the area of a circle
The area \( A \) of a circle is given by the formula \( A=\pi r^{2} \), where \( r \) is the radius of the circle.
Step2: Differentiate the area with respect to time \( t \)
Using the chain rule, we differentiate both sides of \( A = \pi r^{2}\) with respect to \( t \). The derivative of \( A \) with respect to \( t \) is \( \frac{dA}{dt}\), and the derivative of \( \pi r^{2}\) with respect to \( t \) is \( 2\pi r\frac{dr}{dt}\) (by the chain rule, since we are differentiating with respect to \( t \), we multiply by \( \frac{dr}{dt}\)). So we have \( \frac{dA}{dt}=2\pi r\frac{dr}{dt}\).
Step3: Use the given condition
We are given that the area is increasing twice as fast as its radius, which means \( \frac{dA}{dt} = 2\frac{dr}{dt}\).
Step4: Substitute and solve for \( r \)
Substitute \( \frac{dA}{dt}=2\frac{dr}{dt}\) into the equation \( \frac{dA}{dt}=2\pi r\frac{dr}{dt}\). We get \( 2\frac{dr}{dt}=2\pi r\frac{dr}{dt}\). Assuming \( \frac{dr}{dt}
eq0\) (because if \( \frac{dr}{dt} = 0\), the radius is not changing and the area won't be changing either, which doesn't fit the problem context), we can divide both sides of the equation by \( 2\frac{dr}{dt}\). This gives \( 1=\pi r\), and then solving for \( r \) we get \( r = \frac{1}{\pi}\).
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\(\frac{1}{\pi}\)