Let S be the part of the sphere

x^2 + y^2 + z^2 = 25
that lies above the plane z = 4. Let S have constant density k.
(a) Find the center of mass.

(b) Find the moment of inertia about the z-axis.

To find the center of mass and the moment of inertia about the z-axis, we need to set up and evaluate the appropriate triple integrals.

(a) To find the center of mass, we need to find the average values of x, y, and z over the region S. The center of mass (x̅, ȳ, ẑ) can be calculated using the following formulas:

x̅ = (1/M) ∫∫∫ xρ dV
ȳ = (1/M) ∫∫∫ yρ dV
ẑ = (1/M) ∫∫∫ zρ dV

where M is the total mass of S and ρ is the density. Since the density is constant, ρ = k.

The first step is to find the limits of integration. From the equation of the sphere, we have x^2 + y^2 + z^2 = 25, which implies that z = ±√(25 - x^2 - y^2). Since we are only interested in the part of the sphere above the plane z = 4, we have z = √(25 - x^2 - y^2).

Now we can write the integral for the x-coordinate:

x̅ = (1/M) ∫∫∫ xρ dV
= k/M ∫∫∫ x dV

We can evaluate this integral by using spherical coordinates. The limits of integration for ρ, θ, and φ are:

0 ≤ ρ ≤ 5
0 ≤ θ ≤ 2π
arcsin(4/5) ≤ φ ≤ π/2

The integral becomes:

x̅ = k/M ∫∫∫ x dV
= k/M ∫₀⁵ ∫₀²π ∫ₐʳᶜˢⁱⁿ(⁴/⁵) π/₂ xρ² sinφ dφ dθ dρ

We can now evaluate this triple integral to find the x-coordinate of the center of mass.

(b) To find the moment of inertia about the z-axis, we need to calculate the following integral:

Iz = ∫∫∫ (x^2 + y^2)ρ dV

Again, since the density is constant, ρ = k. Using spherical coordinates, the limits of integration for ρ, θ, and φ are the same as before.

Iz = ∫∫∫ (x^2 + y^2)ρ dV
= k ∫₀⁵ ∫₀²π ∫ₐʳᶜˢⁱⁿ(⁴/⁵) π/₂ (ρ^2 sinφ)(ρ^2 sinφ cos^2θ + ρ^2 sinφ sin^2θ) dφ dθ dρ

We can now evaluate this triple integral to find the moment of inertia about the z-axis.

To find the center of mass of the given part of the sphere, we need to set up a triple integral to calculate the mass and then find the coordinates of the center of mass.

(a) Center of Mass:

Step 1: Calculate the mass of S.
Since S has constant density k, the mass can be calculated by integrating the density over the volume of S.

The volume of S can be obtained by integrating over the region where z lies between 4 and the upper hemisphere of the sphere with radius 5.

To set up the integral, we can use spherical coordinates. The equation of the sphere in spherical coordinates is:

ρ^2 = x^2 + y^2 + z^2

We need to convert the equation of the sphere to spherical coordinates:

ρ^2 = r^2
ρ = 5

Since z = 4 is the plane above which S lies, we know that z will range from 4 to √(25 - ρ^2), where ρ varies between 0 and 5.

The integral for the mass becomes:

m = ∫∫∫ kρ^2 sin(φ) dρ dθ dφ

where the limits of integration are:

ρ: 0 to 5
θ: 0 to 2π
φ: 0 to arccos(4/5)

Step 2: Calculate the first moments with respect to each coordinate axis using the definition:

M_x = ∫∫∫ xρ^2 sin(φ) dρ dθ dφ
M_y = ∫∫∫ yρ^2 sin(φ) dρ dθ dφ
M_z = ∫∫∫ zρ^2 sin(φ) dρ dθ dφ

Step 3: Find the center of mass using the formulas:

X_cm = M_x / m
Y_cm = M_y / m
Z_cm = M_z / m

(b) Moment of Inertia about the z-axis:

The moment of inertia about the z-axis is given by the integral:

I_z = ∫∫∫ (x^2 + y^2)ρ^2 sin(φ) dρ dθ dφ

Using the same coordinate system and limits of integration as in part (a), we can evaluate this integral to find the moment of inertia about the z-axis.