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Problem Text
In this question, $n \geq 2$. \begin{questionparts} \item A solid, of uniform density, is formed by rotating through $360°$ about the $y$-axis the region bounded by the part of the curve $r^{n-1}y = r^n - x^n$ with $0 \leq x \leq r$, and the $x$- and $y$-axes. Show that the $y$-coordinate of the centre of mass of this solid is $\frac{nr}{2(n+1)}$. \item Show that the normal to the curve $r^{n-1}y = r^n - x^n$ at the point $(rp, r(1-p^n))$, where $0 < p < 1$, meets the $y$-axis at $(0, Y)$, where $Y = r\left(1 - p^n - \frac{1}{np^{n-2}}\right)$. In the case $n = 4$, show that the greatest value of $Y$ is $\frac{1}{4}r$. \item A solid is formed by rotating through $360°$ about the $y$-axis the region bounded by the curves $r^3y = r^4 - x^4$ and $ry = -(r^2 - x^2)$, both for $0 \leq x \leq r$. $A$ and $B$ are the points $(0, -r)$ and $(0, r)$, respectively, on the surface of the solid. Show that the solid can rest in equilibrium on a horizontal surface with the vector $\overrightarrow{AB}$ at three different, non-zero, angles to the upward vertical. You should not attempt to find these angles. \end{questionparts}
Solution (Optional)
\begin{questionparts} \item \begin{center} \begin{tikzpicture}[scale=2] \draw[->] (0, -0.5) -- (0, 1.5); \draw[->] (-2, 0) -- (2, 0); \draw[domain = 0:1, variable = \x] plot ({\x},{1-(\x)^3}); \draw[domain = 0:1, variable = \x] plot ({-\x},{1-(\x)^3}); % \draw (2, 0) -- (2, 4.2426); \draw[domain = 3.14:6.81, variable = \x] plot ({(1-(0.6)^3)*cos(deg(\x))}, {0.5+sin(deg(\x))/10}); \draw[domain = 0:6.81, variable = \x] plot ({(1-(0.6)^3)*cos(deg(\x))}, {0.55+sin(deg(\x))/10}); % \node at (2.05, 1.6) {\tiny $\delta x$}; % \node at (2.5, 1.4) {\tiny $(x,y)$}; \node[below] at (1, 0) {\small $r$}; \node[below] at (-1, 0) {\small $-r$}; \node[above left] at (0, 1) {\small $r$}; \end{tikzpicture} \end{center} By symmetry, the centre of mass will lie on the $y$ axis. Notice that a single slice (when revolved around the $y$-axis) has volume $y \cdot \pi \cdot ((x+ \delta x)^2 - x^2) = 2 \pi x y \delta x$, and COM at height $\frac12 y$ so we can conclude: \[ \overline{y} \sum_{\delta x} 2 \pi x y \delta x = \sum_{\delta x} \pi xy^2 \delta x\] \begin{align*} && \overline{y} \int_0^r 2xy \d x &= \int_0^r y^2 x \d x \\ \Rightarrow && \overline{y} 2\int_0^r \left (r - \frac{x^n}{r^{n-1}} \right)x \d x &= \int_0^r \left (r - \frac{x^n}{r^{n-1}} \right)^2 x \d x \\ \Rightarrow && \overline{y} \left [r \frac{x^2}{2} - \frac{1}{r^{n-1}} \frac{x^{n+2}}{n+2} \right]_0^r &= \left [r^2 \frac{x^2}{2} - \frac{2}{r^{n-2}} \frac{x^{n+2}}{n+2} + \frac{1}{r^{2n-2}} \frac{x^{2n+2}}{2n+2} \right]_0^r \\ \Rightarrow && 2\overline{y} \left (\frac{r^3}{2} - \frac{r^3}{n+2} \right) &= \left (\frac12 r^4 - \frac{2}{n+2}r^4 + \frac{1}{2n+2}r^4 \right) \\ \Rightarrow && \overline{y}r^3 \frac{n}{(n+2)} &= r^4\frac{(n+1)(n+2)-2\cdot2\cdot(n+1)+(n+2)}{2(n+1)(n+2)} \\ \Rightarrow && \overline{y} \frac{n}{(n+2)} &= r \left ( \frac{n^2}{2(n+1)(n+2)} \right) \\ \Rightarrow && \overline{y} &= \frac{nr}{2(n+1)} \\ &&&= r \left (1 -p^n \right) \end{align*} as required. \item \begin{align*} && r^{n-1}y &= r^n - x^n \\ \frac{\d}{\d x}: && r^{n-1} \frac{\d y}{\d x} &= -n x^{n-1} \\ && \frac{\d y}{\d x} &= -np^{n-1} \end{align*} Therefor the normal has the equation: \begin{align*} && \frac{y-r(1-p^n)}{x-rp} &= \frac{1}{np^{n-1}} \\ \Rightarrow && Y &= \frac{-rp}{np^{n-1}} + r(1-p^n) \\ &&&= r \left (1 - p^n - \frac{1}{np^{n-2}} \right) \end{align*} If $n = 4$ then \begin{align*} && Y &= r\left (1 - p^4 - \frac{1}{4p^{2}} \right) \\ \Rightarrow && \frac{\d Y}{\d p} &= r \left (-4p^3 + \frac{1}{2p^3} \right) \end{align*} Therefore there is a stationary point if $p^6 = \frac18 \Rightarrow p =2^{-1/2}$. Clearly this will be a maximum (sketch or second derivative) therefore, $Y = r(1 - \frac14 - \frac{2}{4}) = \frac14 r$ \item The centre of mass of this shape can be found using this table: \begin{array}{|c|c|c|} \hline \text{} & \overline{y} & \text{mass} \\ \hline r^3y = r^4 - x^4 & \frac{2r}{5} & \frac{4\pi r^3}{6} = \frac23 \pi r^3\\ ry = -(r^2 - x^2) & -\frac{r}{3}& \frac{2 \pi r^3}{4}=\frac12\pi r^3 \\ \text{combined} & \frac{(\frac25 \cdot \frac23-\frac13 \cdot \frac12)r^4}{\frac76 r^3} = \frac3{35}r & \frac76 \pi r^3\\ \hline \end{array} Normals to the surface through points on the upper surface will meet the $y$-axis between $(-\infty, \frac14 r)$, and since $p = 0 \to -\infty$ and $p = 1 \to -\frac14 r$, so normals will pass through $(0, \frac3{35}r)$ from two different points. Normals to the surface through points on the lower surface will go through $-r(1 - p^2 - \frac12) =- r(\frac12 -p^2)$ which ranges monotonically from $\frac12 r \to -\frac12 r$ so there will be one point where the normal goes through $\frac3{35}r$. Therefore there are three angles where the vector $\overrightarrow{AB}$ is not vertical but the normal to the surfaces runs through the centre of mass (ie the the solid can rest in equilibrium) \end{questionparts}
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