volume & surface areas of solids

Space Figure


A space figure or three-dimensional figure is a figure that has depth in addition
to width and height. Everyday objects such as a tennis ball, a box, a bicycle, and
a redwood tree are all examples of space figures. Some common simple space figures
include cubes, spheres, cylinders, prisms, cones, and pyramids. A space figure having
all flat faces is called a polyhedron. A cube and a pyramid are both polyhedrons;
a sphere, cylinder, and cone are not.



Cross-Section


A cross-section of a space figure is the shape of a particular two-dimensional
"slice" of a space figure.

Example:

The circle on the right is a cross-section of the cylinder on the left.


The triangle on the right is a cross-section of the cube on the left.




Volume


Volume is a measure of how much space a space figure takes up. Volume is used
to measure a space figure just as area is used to measure a plane figure. The volume
of a cube is the cube of the length of one of its sides. The volume of a box is
the product of its length, width, and height.

Example:

What is the volume of a cube with side-length 6 cm?

The volume of a cube is the cube of its side-length, which is 63 = 216
cubic cm.

Example:

What is the volume of a box whose length is 4cm, width is 5 cm, and height is
6 cm?

The volume of a box is the product of its length, width, and height, which is 4 × 5 × 6 = 120
cubic cm.




Surface Area


The surface area of a space figure is the total area of all the faces of the figure.

Example:


What is the surface area of a box whose length is 8, width is 3, and height is
4? This box has 6 faces: two rectangular faces are 8 by 4, two rectangular faces
are 4 by 3, and two rectangular faces are 8 by 3. Adding the areas of all these
faces, we get the surface area of the box:

8 × 4 + 8 × 4 + 4 × 3 + 4 × 3 + 8 × 3 + 8 × 3 =


32 + 32 + 12 + 12 +24 + 24=

136.



Cube


A cube is a three-dimensional figure having six matching square sides. If L
is the length of one of its sides, the volume of the cube is L3 = L × L × L.
A cube has six square-shaped sides. The surface area of a cube is six times the
area of one of these sides.

Example:

The space figure pictured below is a cube. The grayed lines are edges hidden from
view.


Example:

What is the volume and surface are of a cube having a side-length of 2.1 cm?

Its volume would be 2.1 × 2.1 × 2.1 = 9.261
cubic centimeters.

Its surface area would be 6 × 2.1 × 2.1 = 26.46
square centimeters.



Cylinder


A cylinder is a space figure having two congruent circular bases that are parallel.
If L is the length of a cylinder, and r is the radius of one of the
bases of a cylinder, then the volume of the cylinder is L × pi × r2,
and the surface area is 2 × r
 × pi × L + 2 × pi × r2.

Example:

The figure pictured below is a cylinder. The grayed lines are edges hidden from
view.




Sphere


A sphere is a space figure having all of its points the same distance from its
center. The distance from the center to the surface of the sphere is called its
radius. Any cross-section of a sphere is a circle.

If r is the radius of a sphere, the volume V of the sphere is given
by the formula V = 4/3 × pi ×r3.


The surface area S of the sphere is given by the formula S = 4 × pi ×r2.

Example:

The space figure pictured below is a sphere.


Example:

To the nearest tenth, what is the volume and surface area of a sphere having a
radius of 4cm?

Using an estimate of 3.14 for pi,

the volume would be 4/3 × 3.14 × 43 = 4/3 × 3.14 × 4 × 4 × 4 = 268
cubic centimeters.

Using an estimate of 3.14 for pi, the surface area would be 4 × 3.14 × 42 = 4 × 3.14 × 4 × 4 = 201
square centimeters.



Cone


A cone is a space figure having a circular base and a single vertex.

If r is the radius of the circular base, and h is the height of the
cone, then the volume of the cone is 1/3 × pi × r2 × h.

Example:

What is the volume in cubic cm of a cone whose base has a radius of 3 cm, and
whose height is 6 cm, to the nearest tenth?

We will use an estimate of 3.14 for pi.

The volume is 1/3 × pi × 32 × 6 = pi ×18 = 56.52,
which equals 56.5 cubic cm when rounded to the nearest tenth.

Example:

The pictures below are two different views of a cone.





Pyramid


A pyramid is a space figure with a square base and 4 triangle-shaped sides.

Example:

The picture below is a pyramid. The grayed lines are edges hidden from view.




Tetrahedron


A tetrahedron is a 4-sided space figure. Each face of a tetrahedron is a triangle.

Example:

The picture below is a tetrahedron. The grayed lines are edges hidden from view.




Prism


A prism is a space figure with two congruent, parallel bases that are polygons.

Examples:

The figure below is a pentagonal prism (the bases are pentagons). The grayed lines
are edges hidden from view.


The figure below is a triangular prism (the bases are triangles). The grayed lines
are edges hidden from view.


The figure below is a hexagonal prism (the bases are hexagons). The grayed lines
are edges hidden from view..


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