I get Q10.c. now, thanks to your detailed solutions
. But can I use De moivre theorem to solve this?
As for Q9a. is there a way to solve the area using calculus?What about 0 to pi. Is it possible in that case? Im a bit confused 
There is, but doing it by hand is excessively complicated (I tried it once), and one mark should instantly tell you this is not the case. Doing it from 0 to pi would still introduce the same problem of finding the red area (because of symmetry, this is the same as finding twice the area of 0 to pi/2). Remember, your suggestion was to take the strips from the y axis. This means that the strips will be oriented horizontally and not vertically, therefore, you're going to be finding the area enclosed by the y-axis and the curve, not the x-axis and the curve such as the question requires. Hope that makes sense.
As for using De Moivre's theorem, I do not believe so. We can't express az
3 + bz
2... etc easily in the form rcis(a), so we can't apply the theorem. The information in the question would require us to find the values of a,b,c before this was possible anyway.
^and thanks Nilu and SocialRhubarb.