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17 September, 14:31

A paper cup has the shape of a cone with height 10 cm and radius 3 cm (at the top. if water is poured into the cup at a rate of 2cm3/s, how fast is the water level rising when the water is 5 cm deep?

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  1. 17 September, 18:30
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    Let

    h: height of the water

    r: radius of the circular top of the water

    V: the volume of water in the cup.

    We have:

    r/h = 3/10

    So,

    r = (3/10) * h

    the volume of a cone is:

    V = (1/3) * π*r^2*h

    Rewriting:

    V (t) = (1/3) * π * ((3/10) * h (t)) ^2*h (t)

    V (t) = (3π/100) * h (t) ^3

    Using implicit differentiation:

    V' (t) = (9π/100) * h (t) ^2*h' (t)

    Clearing h' (t)

    h' (t) = V' (t) / ((9π/100) * h (t) ^2)

    the rate of change of volume is V' (t) = 2 cm3/s when h (t) = 5 cm.

    substituting:

    h' (t) = 8 / (9π) cm/s

    Answer:

    the water level is rising at a rate of:

    h' (t) = 8 / (9π) cm/s
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