Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

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Two- and Three- Dimensional Figures Advanced Geometry Inductive Reasoning Lesson 3

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Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures. Advanced Geometry Inductive Reasoning Lesson 3. Polygon. Examples. NO HOLES. NO CURVES. SIDES CANNOT OVERLAP. Named by: all vertices written in consecutive order. Concave. “caves in”. extend the sides. extend the sides. Convex. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

Page 1: Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

Advanced GeometryInductive Reasoning

Lesson 3

Page 2: Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

Polygon

Named by: all vertices written in consecutive order

ExamplesNO HOLES

NO CURVES

SIDES CANNOT OVERLAP

Page 3: Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

Convex Concave

extend the sides“caves in”

any extension crosses inside the figure

all extensions lie outside the figure

extend the sides

Page 4: Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

# of sides and angles Name of Polygon

3456789

10n

Names of Polygons

trianglequadrilateral

pentagonhexagonheptagonoctagonnonagondecagonn - gon

Page 5: Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

Regular Polygon

convex polygon

all the sides are congruent

andall angles are congruent

Page 6: Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

Examples: Name each polygon by its number of sides. Then classify it as convex or concave and regular or irregular.

Pentagonconvexregular

Page 7: Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

Perimeter and Area of a RectanglePerimeter – the sum

of the lengths of the sides of a

polygon

Area – the number of square units

needed to cover a surfaceA lwADD ALL SIDES

Page 8: Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

Circumference and Area of a CircleArea

2A r

Circumference – the distance around a circle

2C r

Page 9: Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

Example:Mr. Smith has a circular fence that encloses an area with a diameter of 12 feet. Using the same fence, he wants to create a square fence. What is the maximum side length of the square?

Page 10: Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

Example: Find the perimeter of a square with an area of 30 square centimeters.

Page 11: Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

Example: Find the circumference of a circle with an area of 36 square units.

Page 12: Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

Example: Find the length of each side of the polygon below if its perimeter is 20 units.

Page 13: Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

Polyhedron Definition: a solid with all flat surfaces that enclose a

single region of space

• All flat surfaces are called faces.• The line segments where the faces intersect are edges. • The points where the edges intersect are vertices.

Page 14: Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

PrismsThe two bases are parallel AND congruent.

A regular prism has bases that are regular polygons.

Named by: the shape of the bases

Triangular Prism Rectangular Prism Pentagonal Prism

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Pyramidsone base

Named for: the base

Triangular Pyramid

Rectangular Pyramid

Hexagonal Pyramid

Page 16: Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

Examples: Identify each solid. Name the bases, faces, edges, and vertices.

This picture is on page 62 in your

textbook.

Bases –

Faces –

Edges –

Vertices –

Page 17: Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

Examples: Identify each solid. Name the bases, faces, edges, and vertices.

This picture is on page 61 in your

textbook.

Bases –

Faces –

Edges –

Vertices –

Page 18: Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

CylindersThe two bases are congruent, parallel circles.

NOT polyhedra (polyhedrons)

Conesone circular base

Spheres

Page 19: Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

Examples: Identify each solid. Name the bases, faces, edges, and vertices.

This picture is on page 62 in your

textbook.

Bases –

Faces –

Edges –

Vertices –

Page 20: Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

Examples: Identify each solid. Name the bases, faces, edges, and vertices.

This picture is on page 61 in your

textbook.

Bases –

Faces –

Edges –

Vertices –

Page 21: Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

Height vs. Slant Height

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Surface Area and Volume

Prisms Pyramids

2SA Ph B

V Bh

12

SA Pl B

13

V Bh

P Perimeter of thebaseB areaof the Basel slant height

Page 23: Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

Surface Area and Volume

Cylinders Cones22 2SA rh r

2V r h

2SA rl r

213

V r h

Page 24: Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

Examples: Find the surface area and volume of the square prism.

Page 25: Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

Examples: Find the surface area and volume of the square pyramid.

This picture is on page 62 in your

textbook.

Page 26: Two- and Three-Dimensional Figures

Examples: Find the surface area and volume of the square pyramid.