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20 January, 05:45

A piece of rubber tubing maintains a cylindrical shape as it is stretched. At the instant that the inner radius of the tube is 2 millimeters and the height is 20 millimeters, the inner radius is decreasing at the rate of 0.1 millimeter per second and the height is increasing at the rate of 3 millimeters per second. At this instant, what is the rate of change, in cubic millimeters per second, of the volume of the tube? (The volume V of a cylinder with radius r and height h is V-2h.) B) 20m 80 O 80 D. 84?

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  1. 20 January, 07:42
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    the rate of change in volume is dV/dt = 4π mm³/s = 12.56 mm³/s

    Step-by-step explanation:

    since the volume V of a cylinder is related with the height H and the radius R through:

    V = πR²*H

    then the change in time is given by the derivative with respect to time t

    dV/dt = (∂V/∂R) * (dR/dt) + (∂V/∂H) * (dH/dt)

    the change in volume with radius at constant height is

    (∂V/∂R) = 2*πR*H

    the change in volume with height at constant radius is

    (∂V/∂H) = πR²

    then

    dV/dt = 2π*R*H * (dR/dt) + πR² * (dH/dt)

    replacing values

    dV/dt = 2π * 2 mm * 20 mm * (-0.1 mm/s) + π (2 mm) ² * 3 mm/s = 4π mm³/s

    dV/dt = 4π mm³/s = 12.56 mm³/s
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