A right circular cylinder is at an incline of 15° from the horizontal and the liquid is level with the lowest point of the top rim of the can. The radius is 3.2004 cm and the height is 11.938 cm. What is the volume of the liquid?
I believe I should use integration with cross-sections of rectangles. The width of each rectangle would be the diameter of the cylinder. I believe my limits of integration would be from 0 to 4.7$\cdot\sin(15°)$ or 1.2164. I'm not sure how to figure out the changing lengths of the rectangles.
Am I on the right track?
$$\int_{0}^{4.7\sin(15°)}6.4008?dy$$
No calculus is needed––trig will do. I always hated when they posed simple problems and asked for a calculus answer.We need to find the height of the center of the liquid surface. Given this, you can use the standard cylinder volume formula to find the answer. To do this we must multiply the distance-to-center across the surface times the sine of 15 degrees and subtract it from the cylinder height. The radius of the cylinder divided by the liquid surface distance-to-center is the cosine of the angle.
The cosine of 15 degrees is (sqrt(6)+sqrt(2))/4 = 0.965925826. The distance across the surface to the center (the hypotenuse) is the radius divided by the cosine so 3.2004/0.965925826=3.313297889.
Then we find the sine of 15 degrees: (sqrt(6)-sqrt(2))/4=0.258819045. The surface radius times the sine is 3.313297889*0.258819045=0.857544595.
If you subtract this from the cylinder height you have the mean height of the liquid for your volume calculation. If the professor complains, I would ask for a problem that cannot be done without calculus.
The height at the center of the liquid is is 11.938-0.857544595= 11.08045541
The formula for volume of a cylinder is:
πr^2 h = 3.141592654*3.2004^2 *11.08045541= 356.5463596