Want this question answered?
Calculus can be used to find the surface area of any object given that you know the equation describing said object. It's usually easier to find the area from experiment or through using a combination of existing models to approximate the surface area
Integrate between the bounds.
It depends, but in let's look at a simple example to help you see how. How would you find the surface area of a cube. Find the surface area of one of the faces and since there are six of those, multiply it by 6. For example, a 2x2x2 cube. Each face has a surface area of 4 and there are 6 of them so the total surface area is 24 units. We do the same thing with other 3d objects, but it may be harder to find the surface area of faces. In face, sometimes there are no faces and we may need calculus to find the surface area.
i havent found yet will lwt u know later ..
You find the surface area of a cube by using the formula 6e2. In this case, e=edge.
As you would find the surface area of a normal shape using scale factors: to find the volume scale factor cubed, therefore to find the surface area of the hypercube, you do the scale factor to the power of four. geoffrz450@yahoo.co.uk
To estimate area enclosed between the x-axis and a curve on a certain bounded region you can use rectangles or parallelograms.
to find the surface area you have to first find the area of each part then add the areas together.
It depends on the surface area of what!
Take the circumference and multiply it by it's height to get the lateral surface area.
The surface area of a sphere with diameter 78 and using 3.14 for Pi is about 19,103.76 units2
Take the cube root of the volume to get the length of an edge. Square this number to get the area of a side, Multiply this by 6 to get the total surface area of the cube.