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Agenda Bell Ringer Bell Ringer

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1 02.26.2019 Agenda Bell Ringer Bell Ringer
Volume Video: ch?v=aPXvrFMyhSU Cornell notes Topic: Volume E.Q. How can I calculate the volume of a given shape? KWL Chart

2 Volume & Surface Area Section 6.2

3 Volume The volume is a measure of the space inside a solid object.
Volume is measure of 3 dimensions. The units of volume are cube length or length3. Example of volume units are cm3, cubic feet, cubic meters or inches3.

4 Surface Area Surface area is the flat area on the surface of a three- dimensional object. What you do is compute the area of all the sides of an object and then add them up.

5 The Cube For an arbitrary cube with edges that have length L, H, and W. The volume is V = LWH. The surface area of the cube is the sum of the areas of each face SA = 2LW + 2HW + 2LH. H W L

6 Length Width Height How would you work out the volume?

7 The Sphere The volume of a sphere with radius r, is V = (4/3)πr3.
The surface area is SA = 4πr2.

8 The cylinder The volume of the cylinder is height of the cylinder times the area of a circle. V = πr2h. The surface area of a cylinder has two parts. The ends are circles so each circle has an area of πr2. The lateral surface can be thought of as a rectangle wound into a circle. One side of the rectangle is h, the other side is the circumference of the circle which is 2πr. 2πr h h

9 Volume of a Cylinder A cylinder is a special type of prism with a circular cross-section. Volume = area of circular base × height h r Recall that the area of a circle is equal to πr2.

10 The pyramid and cone The pyramid and cone have similar formulas for their volume. The basic volume formula is V = (1/3)Ah. Where A is the area of the base. For a pyramid, the area of the base A is just the area of a rectangle. For a cone, the area of the base is the area of a circle. pyramid cone

11 Prisms A prism is a 3-D shape that has a constant cross-section along its length. has the same hexagonal cross-section throughout its length. For example, this hexagonal prism This is called a hexagonal prism because its cross-section is a hexagon. Tell pupils that cubes and cuboids are also examples of prisms. Prisms are usually named after the shape of their cross-section.

12 Volume of a prism The volume of a prism is found by multiplying the area of its cross-section by its length or height. A h A l

13 What is the volume of this triangular prism?
Volume of a prism What is the volume of this triangular prism? 7.2 cm 4 cm 5 cm Area of cross-section = ½ × 5 × 4 = 10 cm2 Volume of prism = 10 × 7.2 = 72 cm3

14 Reference d_surface_area_dalesandro.ppt


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