calculus 1/engineering math

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Uploaded by on Jun 20, 2008

Application of antidifferentiation or integration to find the volume. This is used in physics, our example utilizes this calc 1 technique in an electricity problem

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Uploader Comments (1steinstein)

  • Next time have the camera on a stable surface so it has a constant perspective. Also, the math is fine as I'm sure you know but you might want to give a brief description of the method you're using; in this case the disk/washer method.

  • Thanks for the advice.

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This video is a response to Implicit Differentiation
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  • You teach really well. You make math seem fun!! Very creative problem you came up with.

  • is this the same as calculus 1?

  • I don't know whether that is the case everywhere, but the school I go to, Math like this is still in the hundred level (Math 174). Nice job with the subject!

  • You obviously enjoy lecturing undergraduate physics, are you in grad school?

  • Your exxcellent

  • your good at this maths you should become a professor

  • yeah manre! you is the man in this maths bway!

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