The curve is \( y = \sqrt{x} \), which is the upper half of a parabola. The area under this curve from \( x = 0 \) to \( x = 4 \) can be found using the following definite integral: \[ A = \int_0^4 \sqrt{x} \, dx \] We know that: \[ \sqrt{x} = x^{1/2} \] So, the integral becomes: \[ A = \int_0^4 x^{1/2} \, dx \] Now, we can integrate: \[ A = \left[ \frac{2}{3} x^{3/2} \right]_0^4 \] Substituting the limits of integration: \[ A = \frac{2}{3} \left( 4^{3/2} - 0^{3/2} \right) \] Since \( 4^{3/2} = 8 \), we get: \[ A = \frac{2}{3} \times 8 = \frac{16}{3} \] Therefore, the area of the region is \( \frac{16}{3} \, \text{square units}. \)
Let \[ f(t)=\int \left(\frac{1-\sin(\log_e t)}{1-\cos(\log_e t)}\right)dt,\; t>1. \] If $f(e^{\pi/2})=-e^{\pi/2}$ and $f(e^{\pi/4})=\alpha e^{\pi/4}$, then $\alpha$ equals

