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Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math

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Page 1: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area,

and Volume

Regular Math

Page 2: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Section 6.1: Perimeter & Area of

Rectangles & Parallelograms

Perimeter – the distance around the

OUTSIDE of a figure

Area – the number of square units

INSIDE a figure

Page 3: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Finding the Perimeter of Rectangles

and Parallelograms

Find the perimeter

of each figure.

P = S + S + S + S

P = 26 + 20 + 26 +

20

P = 92 feet

Page 4: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Try this one on your own…

P = S + S + S + S

P = 17.5x + 11x + 17.5x + 11x

P = 57X units

Find the perimeter

of each figure.

Page 5: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Using a Graph to Find Area

Graph each figure with the given vertices. Then find the

area of each figure.

(-3, -1), (-3, 4), (1, 4), (1, -1)A = bH

b = base ; H =

height

A = 4 X 5

A = 20 units squared

Page 6: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Try this one on your own…

Graph each figure with

the given vertices.

Then find the area of

the figure.

(-4, 0), (2, 0), (4, 3), (-2, 3)

A = bH

A = 6 x 3

A = 18 units squared

Page 7: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Finding Area and Perimeter of a

Composite Figure

Step One: Fill in the missing sides.

Step Two: Solve for Perimeter

Step Three: Break the figure into rectangles.

Step Four: Solve for Area of each rectangle.

Step Five: Add the areas of each individual rectangles.

Find the perimeter and area of the figure.

Page 8: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Section 6.2: Perimeter and Area of

Triangles and Trapezoids

Find the perimeter

of each figure.

P = S + S + S

P = 22 + 22 + 27

P = 71 feet

Page 9: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Try this one on your own…

Find the perimeter

of each figure.

P = S + S + S

P = 2.5x + 5y + 2x + 2x + 4y

P = 6.5x + 9y

Page 10: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Find the area of triangles and

trapezoids.

Graph and find the

area of each figure

with the given

vertices.(-1,-3), (0,2), (3,2), (3, -3)

A = ½ x h x (b1 + b2)

A = ½ x 5 x (4 +3)

A = ½ x 5 x (7)

A = 2.5 x 7

A =17.5 units squared

Page 11: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Try this one on your own…

A = ½ x h x (B1 + B2)

A = ½ x 3 x (3 + 5)

A = ½ x 3 x (8)

A = 1.5 x 8

A = 12 units squared

Graph and find the

area of each figure

with the given

vertices. (-3,-2), (-3,1), (0,1), (2, -2)

Page 12: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Section 6.3: The Pythagorean

Theorem

Page 13: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Example 1: Finding the length of

the hypotenuse.

Find the length of

the hypotenuse.

Page 14: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Graph the triangle

with coordinates

(6,1), (0,9), and

(0,1).

Find the length of

the hypotenuse.

Page 15: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Try this one on your own…

Find the length of

the hypotenuse.

C = 6.40

Graph the triangle

with the following

coordinates (1,-2),

(1,7), and (13,-2).

A = 9

B = 12

Find the length of

the hypotenuse.

C = 15

Page 16: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Example 2: Finding the length of a

Leg in a Right Triangle

Solve for the

unknown side in

the right triangle.

Page 17: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Try this one on your own…

Solve for the

unknown side in

the right triangle.

b = 24

Page 18: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Example 3: Using the Pythagorean

Theorem to Find Area

Use the

Pythagorean

Theorem to find the

height of the

triangle.

Then, use the

height to find the

area of the triangle.

Page 19: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Try this one on your own…

Use the

Pythagorean

Theorem to find the

height of the triangle.

h = square root of 20

or 4.47

Then, use the height

to find the area of

the triangle.

A = 17.89 units

squared

Page 20: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Section 6.4: Circles

Page 21: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Finding the circumference of a

Circle.

Find the circumference of each circle,

both in terms of pi and to the nearest

tenth. Use 3.14 for pi.

Circle with radius 5 cm

Circle with diameter 1.5 in

Page 22: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Try these on your own…

Find the

circumference of

each circle, both in

terms of pi and to

the nearest tenth.

Use 3.14 for pi.

Circle with radius 4 m

C = 8pi m or 25.1 m

Circle with

diameter 3.3 ft

C = 3.3pi or 10.4 ft

Page 23: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Finding the Area of a Circle.

Find the area of each circle, both in

terms of pi and to the nearest tenth.

Use 3.14 for pi.

Circle with radius 5 cm

Circle with diameter 1.5 in

Page 24: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Try these on your own…

Find the area of

each circle, both in

terms of pi and to

the nearest tenth.

Use 3.14 for pi.

Circle with radius 4 in

A = 16pi inches squared or 50.2 inches squared

Circle with diameter 3.3 m

A = 2.7225pi meters squared or 8.5 meters squared

Page 25: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Finding Area and Circumference on

a Coordinate Plane.

Graph the circle with center (-1,1) that

passes through (-1,3). Find the area

and circumference, both in terms of pi

and to the nearest tenth. Use 3.14 for

pi.

Step One: Graph Circle

Step Two: Find the radius

Step Three: Use the Area and

Circumference Formula

Page 26: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Try this one on your own…

Graph the circle with center (-2,1) that

passes through (1,-1). Find the area

and circumference, both in terms of pi

and to the nearest tenth. Use 3.14 for

pi.

A = 9pi units squared and 28.3 units

squared

C = 6pi units and 18.8 units

Page 27: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

A bicycle odometer recorded 147 revolutions of a wheel with diameter 4/3 ft. How far did the bicycle travel? Use 22/7 for pi.

The distance traveled is the circumference of the wheel times the number of revolutions.

C = pi(d) = (22/7) (4/3) = 88/21

Circumference x Revolutions88/21 x 147 = 616 feet

Page 28: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Try this one on your own…

A Ferris wheel has a diameter of 56

feet and makes 15 revolutions per

ride. How far would someone travel

during a ride? Use 22/7 for pi.

C = 22/7(56) = 176 feet

Distance = 176 (15) = 2640 feet

Page 29: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Section 6.5: Drawing Three

Dimensional Figures

Example 1: Drawing a Rectangular Box

� Use isometric dot paper to sketch a rectangular box that is 4 units long, 2 units wide, and 3 units high.� Step 1: Lightly draw the edges of the bottom face. It will

look like a parallelogram.� 2 units by 4 units

� Step 2: Lightly draw the vertical line segments from the vertices of the base.

� 3 units high

� Step 3: Lightly draw the top face by connecting the vertical lines to form a parallelogram.

� 2 units by 4 units

� Step 4: Darken the lines.� Use solid lines for the edges that are visible and dashed lines

for the edges that are hidden.

Page 30: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Example 2: Sketching a One-Point

Perspective Drawing

Step 1: Draw a rectangle.This will be the front face.

Label the vertices A through D.

Step 2: Mark a vanishing point “V” somewhere above your rectangle, and draw a dashed line from each vertex to “V”.

Step 3: Choose a point “G” on line BV. Lightly draw a smaller rectangle that has G as one of its vertices.

Step 4: Connect the vertices of the two rectangles along the dashed lines.

Step 5: Darken the visible edges, and draw dashed segments for the hidden edges. Erase the vanishing point and all the lines connecting it to the vertices.

Page 31: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Example 3: Sketching a Two-Point

Perspective Drawing

Step 1: Draw a vertical segment and label it AD. Draw a horizontal line above segment AD. Label vanishing points V and W on the line. Draw dashed segments AV, AW, DV, and DW.

Step 2: Label point C on segment DV and point E on segment DW. Draw vertical segments through C and E. Draw segment EV and CW.

Step 3: Darken the visible edges. Erase horizon lines and dashed segments.

Page 32: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Section 6.6: Volume of Prisms

and Cylinders

Page 33: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Example 1: Finding the Volume of

Prisms and Cylinders

Find the volume of

each figure to the

nearest tenth.

Step One: Figure

out what formula to

use.

Step Two: Plug the

numbers into the

formula.

Step Three: Solve

Page 34: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Try this one on your own…

Find the volume of

each figure to the

nearest tenth.

Page 35: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Example 2: Exploring the Effects of

Changing Dimensions

A juice can has a radius of 1.5 inches and

a height of 5 inches. Explain whether

doubling the height of the can would have

the same effect on the volume as doubling

the radius.

Original Double

Radius

Double Height

Page 36: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Try this one on your own..

A juice can has a radius of 2 inches

and a height of 5 inches. Explain

whether tripling the height would have

the same effect on the volume as

tripling the radius.

Page 37: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Example 1: Finding the Volume of

Prisms and Cylinders

Find the volume of

each figure to the

nearest tenth.

A rectangular prism

with base 1 meter

by 3 meters and height of 6 meters

Page 38: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Try these on your own…

Find the volume of

each figure to the

nearest tenth.

A rectangular prism

with base 2 cm by

5 cm and a height of 3cm

Page 39: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Example 2: Exploring the Effects of

Changing Dimensions

A juice box measures 3 inches by 2 inches

by 4 inches. Explain whether doubling the

length, width, or height of the box would

double the amount of juice the box holds.

Original Length Width Height

Page 40: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Try this one on your own…

A juice box measures 3 inches by 2 inches

by 4 inches. Explain whether tripling the

length, width, or height would triple the

amount of juice the box holds.

Original Length Width Height

Page 41: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Example 3: Construction

Application

Kansai International

Airport is a man-made

island that is a

rectangular prism

measuring 60 ft deep, 4000 ft wide, and 2.5

miles long. What is the

volume of rock, gravel,

and concrete that was

needed to build the island?

Try this one on your

own…

A section of an airport

runway is a rectangular

prism measuring 2 feet

thick, 100 feet wide,

and 1.5 miles long.

What is the volume of

material that was

needed to build the

runway?

Page 42: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Example 4: Finding the Volume of

Composite Figures

Find the volume of

the milk carton.

Page 43: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Try this one on your own…

Find the volume of the barn.

Page 44: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Section 6.7: Volume of Pyramids

and Cones

Page 45: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Example 1: Finding the Volume of

Pyramids and Cones

Find the volume of

each figure.

Try this one on

your own…

Find the volume of

each figure.

Page 46: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Example 2: Exploring the Effects of

Changing Dimensions

A cone has a radius 7 feet and height 14

feet. Explain whether tripling the height

would have the same effect on the volume

of the cone as tripling the radius.

Original Triple Height Triple Radius

Page 47: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Try this one on your own…

A cone has a radius 3 feet and height 4

feet. Explain whether doubling the height

would have the same effect on the volume

as doubling the radius.

Original Double Height Double Radius

Page 48: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Example 1: Finding the Volume of

Pyramids and Cones

Find the volume of

each figure.

Page 49: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Try these on your own…

Find the volume of

each figure.

Page 50: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Example 3: Social Studies

Application

The Great Pyramid

of Giza is a square

pyramid. Its height

is 481 feet, and its

base has 756 feet

sides. Find the

volume of the

pyramid.

Try these on your

own…

The pyramid of

Kukulcan in Mexico

is a square

pyramid. Its height

is 24 meters and its base has 55 meter

sides. Find the

volume of the

pyramid.

Page 51: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Section 6.8: Surface Area of Prisms

and Cylinders

Page 52: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Example 1: Finding Surface Area

Find the surface

area of each figure.

Try this one on

your own…

Page 53: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Try this one on

your own…

Find the surface

area of each figure.

Find the surface

area of each figure.

Page 54: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Example 1: Finding Surface Area

Finding the surface

area of each figure.

Try this one on

your own…

Finding the surface

area of each figure.

Page 55: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Example 2: Exploring the Effects of

Changing Dimensions

A cylinder has a diameter of 8 inches and a height of 3 inches. Explain whether doubling the height would have the same effect on the surface area as doubling the radius.

Original Double Height Double Radius

Page 56: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Try this one on your own…

A cylinder has a diameter of 8 inches and a

height of 3 inches. Explain whether tripling

the height would have the same effect on

the surface area as tripling the radius.

Original Triple Radius Triple Height

Page 57: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Example 3: Art Application

A web site advertises

that it can turn your

photo into an

anamorphic image. To

reflect the picture, you need to cover a

cylinder that is 32mm

in diameter and 100

mm tall with reflective

material. How much reflective material do

you need?

Try this one on your

own…

A cylindrical soup can

has a radius of 7.6 cm

and is 11.2 cm tall.

What is the area of the

label that covers the

side of the can?

Page 58: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Section 6.9: Surface Area of

Pyramids and Cones

Page 59: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Example 1: Finding Surface Area

Find the surface

area of each figure.

Try this one on

your own…

Find the surface

area of each figure.

Page 60: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Try this one on

your own…

Find the surface

area of each figure.

Find the surface

area of each figure.

Page 61: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Example 1: Finding Surface Area

Try this one on

your own…

Find the surface

area of each figure.

Find the surface

area of each figure.

Page 62: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Example 2: Exploring the Effects of

Changing Dimensions

A cone has a diameter 8 in. and slant

height 5 in. Explain whether doubling the

slant height would have the same effect on

the surface area as doubling the radius.

Original Double Slant Height Double Radius

Page 63: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Try this one on your own…

A cone has diameter of 8 in. and slant

height 3 in. Explain whether tripling the

slant height would have the same effect on

the surface area as tripling the radius.

Original Triple Radius Triple Slant Height

Page 64: Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volumelibvolume3.xyz/civil/btech/semester4/surveying2/areasandvolumes/area... · Chapter 6: Perimeter, Area, and Volume Regular Math. Section 6.1:

Example 3: Life Science Application

An ant lion pit is an

inverted cone with

the dimensions

shown. What is the

lateral surface area

of the pit?

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Try this one on your own…

The upper portion

of an hourglass is

approximately an

inverted cone with

the given

dimensions. What

is the lateral

surface area of the

upper portion of

the hourglass?

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Section 6.10: Spheres

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Example 1: Finding the Volume of a

Sphere

Find the volume of a sphere with a radius

of 6 ft, both in terms of pi and to the

nearest tenth.

Try this one on your own…

Find the volume of a sphere with radius 9 cm,

both in terms of pi and to the nearest tenth.

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Example 2: Finding Surface Area of

a Sphere

Find the surface

area, both in terms

of pi and to the

nearest tenth.

Try this one on

your own…

Find the surface

area, both in terms

of pi and to the

nearest tenth.

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Example 3: Comparing Volumes

and Surface Areas

Compare the volume and surface

area of a sphere with radius 21 cm

with that of a rectangular prism

measuring 28 x 33 x 42cm.Sphere –

Volume

Sphere –

Surface Area

Prism –

Volume

Sphere –

Surface Area

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Try this one on your own…

Compare volumes and surface areas

of a sphere with radius 42 cm and a

rectangular prism measuring 44 cm

by 84 cm by 84 cm.Sphere –

Volume

Sphere –

Surface Area

Prism –

Volume

Prism –

Surface Area