The radius of a circle in increasing at the rate of 0.5cm/s. Find the rate at which the circumference increases if the radius in 5cm.

C = 2πr

dC/dt = 2π dr/dt
= 2π(.5) cm/s
= π cm/s

To find the rate at which the circumference increases, we need to differentiate the formula for the circumference of a circle with respect to time.

The formula for the circumference of a circle is C = 2πr, where C is the circumference and r is the radius.

Differentiating both sides of the equation with respect to time gives us:

dC/dt = d/dt (2πr)

Recall that the derivative of a constant multiplied by a function is equal to the product of the constant and the derivative of the function. Therefore, the derivative of 2πr with respect to time is:

dC/dt = 2π(d/dt (r))

Given that the radius is increasing at a rate of 0.5 cm/s, we can substitute this value:

dC/dt = 2π(d/dt (5 cm))

Taking the derivative of the constant 5 cm with respect to time, we have:

dC/dt = 2π(0 cm/s)

Since the rate of change of a constant is always zero, the last term becomes zero:

dC/dt = 0

Thus, the rate at which the circumference increases is 0 cm/s.

To find the rate at which the circumference increases, we can use the formula for the circumference of a circle:

Circumference = 2πr

where r is the radius.

Differentiating both sides of the equation with respect to time will give us the rate of change of the circumference:

dCircumference/dt = d(2πr)/dt

Since the radius is increasing at a constant rate of 0.5 cm/s, we can substitute this value in for dr/dt:

dCircumference/dt = d(2π(5))/dt

Simplifying the equation, the derivative of a constant value such as 2π is zero:

dCircumference/dt = 0

Therefore, the rate at which the circumference increases is 0 cm/s.