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Section 6.2

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Section 6.2. Spatial Relationships. Figures in Space. Closed spatial figures are known as solids . A polyhedron is a closed spatial figure composed of polygons, called the faces of the polyhedron. The intersections of the faces are the edges of the polyhedron. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Section 6.2 Spatial Relationships
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Page 1: Section 6.2

Section 6.2

Spatial Relationships

Page 2: Section 6.2

Figures in Space

• Closed spatial figures are known as solids.• A polyhedron is a closed spatial figure

composed of polygons, called the faces of the polyhedron.

• The intersections of the faces are the edges of the polyhedron.

• The vertices of the faces are the vertices of the polyhedron.

Page 3: Section 6.2

Polyhedrons

• Below is a rectangular prism, which is a polyhedron.

A B Specific Name of Solid: Rectangular Prism D C Name of Faces: ABCD (Top),

EFGH (Bottom), DCGH (Front),

E F ABFE (Back), AEHD (Left),

H G CBFG (Right)Name of Edges: AB, BC, CD, DA, EF, FG,

GH, HE, AE, BF, CG, DH

Vertices: A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H

Page 4: Section 6.2

Intersecting, Parallel, and Skew Lines

• Below is a rectangular prism, which is a polyhedron.

A B Intersecting Lines: AB and BC, BC and CD, D C CD and DA, DA and AB, AE and EF,

AE and EH, BF and EF, BF and FG, CG and FG, CG and GH, DH and GH,

E F DH and EH, AE and DA, AE and AB,BF and AB, BF and BC, CG and BC

H G CG and DC, DH and DC, DH and AD

Page 5: Section 6.2

Intersecting, Parallel, and Skew Lines

• Below is a rectangular prism, which is a polyhedron.

A B Parallel Lines: AB, DC, EF, and HG; D C AD, BC, EH, and FG;

AE, BF, CG, and DH.

E F Skew Lines: (Some Examples)AB and CG, EH and BF, DC and AE

H G

Page 6: Section 6.2

Formulas in Sect. 6.3 and Sect. 6.4

• Diagonal of a Right Rectangular Prism• diagonal = √(l² + w² + h²). l = length, w = width, h = height• Distance Formula in Three Dimensions• d = √[(x₂ - x₁)² + (y₂ - y₁)² + (z₂ - z₁)²]• Midpoint Formula in Three Dimensions• x₁ + x₂ , y₁ + y₂ , z₁ + z₂ 2 2 2

Page 7: Section 6.2

Section 7.1

Surface Area and Volume

Page 8: Section 6.2

Surface Area and Volume

• The surface area of an object is the total area of all the exposed surfaces of the object.

• The volume of a solid object is the number of nonoverlapping unit cubes that will exactly fill the interior of the figure.

Page 9: Section 6.2

Surface Area and Volume

Rectangular Prism• Surface Area• S = 2ℓw + 2wh + 2ℓh

• Volume• V = ℓwh

• ℓ = length• w = width• h = height

Cube• Surface Area• S = 6s²

• Volume • V = s³

• S = Surface Area• V = Volume• s = side (edge)

Page 10: Section 6.2

Section 7.2

Surface Area and Volume of Prisms

Page 11: Section 6.2

Surface Area of Right Prisms

• An altitude of a prism is a segment that has endpoints in the planes containing the bases and that is perpendicular to both planes.

• The height of a prism is the length of an altitude.

Page 12: Section 6.2

Surface Area of a Right Prism

• S = L + 2B or S = Ph + 2B• S = surface area, L = Lateral Area, • B = Base Area, P = Perimeter of the base, • h = height• The surface area of a prism may be broken

down into two parts: the area of the bases and the area of the lateral faces.

Page 13: Section 6.2

Surface Area of a Right Prism

• Below is a rectangular prism, which is a polyhedron.

A B P = 5 + 4 + 5 + 4 B = (5)(4) D C P = 18 B = 20

12 S = Ph + 2B

E F S = (18)(12) + 2(20) 4 S = 216 + 40

H 5 G S = 256 un²

Page 14: Section 6.2

Volume of a Prism

• The volume of a solid measures how much space the solid takes or can hold.

• The volume, V, of a prism with height, h, and base area, B is:

• V = Bh

Page 15: Section 6.2

Surface Area of a Right Prism

• Below is a rectangular prism, which is a polyhedron.

A B B = (5)(4) D C B = 20

12 V = Bh

E F V = (20)(12) 4 V = 240 un³

H 5 G

Page 16: Section 6.2

Section 7.3

Surface Area and Volume of Pyramids

Page 17: Section 6.2

Properties of Pyramids

• A pyramid is a polyhedron consisting of one base, which is a polygon, and three or more lateral faces.

• The lateral faces are triangles that share a single vertex, called the vertex of the pyramid.

• Each lateral face has one edge in common with the base, called a base edge. The intersection of two lateral faces is a lateral edge.

Page 18: Section 6.2

Properties of Pyramids

• The altitude of a pyramid is the perpendicular segment from the vertex to the plane of the base.

• The height of a pyramid is the length of its altitude.

• A regular pyramid is a pyramid whose base is a regular polygon and whose lateral faces are congruent isosceles triangles.

• The length of an altitude of a lateral face of a regular pyramid is called the slant height.

Page 19: Section 6.2

Surface Area of a Regular Pyramid

• S = L + B or S = ½ℓp + B. A A is the vertex of the pyramid.

B, F, D, and C are the other vertices. Base Edges: BF, FD, DC, CB F Lateral Edges: AB, AC, AD, AF B Base: BFDC

Lateral Faces: ∆ABC, ∆ACD, ∆ADF, ∆AFB

D The yellow line is the slant height. C The green line is the height of the

pyramid.

Page 20: Section 6.2

Surface Area of a Regular Pyramid

• S = L + B or S = ½ℓP + B. S = Surface Area L = Lateral Area B = Base Area

ℓ = slant height P = 9 + 12 + 9 + 12 ℓ = 10 P = 42 units 8 B = (9)(12) 10 B = 108 un²

9 S = ½ (10)(42) + 108 12 S = 210 + 108

S = 318 un²

Page 21: Section 6.2

Volume of a Regular Pyramid

• V = ⅓ Bh V = Volume B = Base Area h = height of

pyramid

h = 8 B = (9)(12) 10 8 B = 108 un²

V = ⅓ (108)(8) 9 V = 288 un³ 12

Page 22: Section 6.2

Section 7.4

Surface Area and Volume of Cylinders

Page 23: Section 6.2

Properties of Cylinders

• A cylinder is a solid that consists of a circular region and its translated image on a parallel plane, with a lateral surface connecting the circles.

• The bases of a cylinder are circles.• An altitude of a cylinder is a segment that has endpoints in the

planes containing the bases and is perpendicular to both bases.• The height of a cylinder is the length of the altitude.• The axis of a cylinder is the segment joining the centers of the

two bases.• If the axis of a cylinder is perpendicular to the bases, then the

cylinder is a right cylinder. If not, it is an oblique cylinder.

Page 24: Section 6.2

The Surface Area of a Right Cylinder

• The surface area, S, of a right cylinder with lateral area L, base area B, radius r, and height h is:

• S = L +2B or S = 2πrh + 2πr²

Page 25: Section 6.2

Surface Area of a Right Cylinder

• S = L +2B or S = 2πrh + 2πr²

S = 2π(4)(9) + 2π4²S = 2π(36) + 2π(16)

9 S = 72π + 32πS = 326.73 un² S = 104π un²

4 (approximate answer) ( exact answer)

Page 26: Section 6.2

Volume of a Cylinder

• The volume, V, of a cylinder with radius r, height h, and base area B is:

• V = Bh or V = πr²h

Page 27: Section 6.2

Surface Area of a Right Cylinder

• V = Bh or V = πr²h

V = π(4²)(9)V = π(16)(9)

9 V = π(144)V = 452.39 un³ V = 144π un³

4 (approximate answer) ( exact answer)

Page 28: Section 6.2

Section 7.5

Surface Area and Volume of Cones


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