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Application of Calc :( (1 Viewer)

JMill

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I am confused, if there is a Q where they give a velocity formula (eg: V= 1/2t + sin(1/2t)) and they ask you to find the total distance travelled (say between t=0 and t=2), given that V is always > 0, can you get this by finding the area under the Velocity graph between 0 and 2 or does this not work?
 

shaon0

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Integrate V=1/2t + sin(0.5t) to find displacement, then substitute t-0 and t=2 into the displacement equation you found.
 

alez

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Yeah, it should work
 

Timothy.Siu

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JMill said:
I am confused, if there is a Q where they give a velocity formula (eg: V= 1/2t + sin(1/2t)) and they ask you to find the total distance travelled (say between t=0 and t=2), given that V is always > 0, can you get this by finding the area under the Velocity graph between 0 and 2 or does this not work?
it should work as long as it doesn't switch from negative to positive
 

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