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Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian Barr Dan Logan
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Page 1: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Chapter 15:

Geometric SolidsBrian Barr Dan Logan

Page 2: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

This powerpoint is dedicated to math

Page 3: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 1: Lines and Planes in Space

• Postulate 11: If two points lie in a plane, the line that contains them lies in the plane

• Postulate 12: If two planes intersect, they intersect on a line

Postulate 11 Postulate 12

Page 4: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 1 Vocabulary

• Two lines are skew iff they are not parallel and don’t intersect

• Two planes, or a line and a plane, are parallel iff they do not intersect

Plane 1

Plane 2

Parallel planes

Page 5: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 1 Vocabulary

• A line and a plane are perpendicular iff they intersect and the line is perpendicular to every line in the plane that passes through the point of intersection

Page 6: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 1 Vocabulary

• Two planes are perpendicular iff one plane contains a line that is perpendicular to the other plane

• A line and a plane (or two planes) that are not perpendicular or parallel are oblique

Page 7: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Solid Geometry as a Deductive System

Theorems:• A line and a point not on the line determine a plane• Two intersecting lines determine a plane• Two parallel lines determine a plane• A line and a plane are perpendicular if they intersect and the line is perpendicular

to two lines in the plane that pass through the point of intersection• If three lines are perpendicular to a line at the same point, the three lines are

coplanar• Planes perpendicular to the same line are parallel to one another• Lines perpendicular to the same plane are parallel to one another• A plane perpendicular to one of two parallel lines is perpendicular to both of them

Page 8: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 2: Rectangular Solids

• A polyhedron is a solid bounded by parts of intersecting planes

• A rectangular solidis a polyhedronthat has six rectangular faces

FaceVertices

Edges

Page 9: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 2 Vocabulary

• Two vertices of a solid that are not vertices of the same face are opposite vertices

• A line segment that connects two opposite vertices of a rectangular solid is a diagonal of the solid

Opposite vertices

Page 10: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 2 Vocabulary

• The lengths of the three edges of a rectangular solid that meet at one of its vertices are the dimensions of the solid and are usually called its length, width, and height

lengthwidth

height

Page 11: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 2 Vocabulary

• Theorem 79: The length of a diagonal of a rectangular solid with dimensions l, w, and h is

l² + w² + h²• Corollary to theorem 79: The length of a

diagonal of a cube with edges of length e is e 3

Page 12: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 3: Prisms

• A prism has two congruent faces, called bases, which lie in parallel planes

• A and B are two parallel planes, R is a polygonal region in one plane, and l is a line that intersects both planes but not R. The solid made up of all segments

parallel to line l that connect a point of region R to a point of the other plane is a prism

A

B

Rl

Page 13: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 3 Vocabulary

• The faces of a prism are parallelograms, known as lateral faces, and the edges in which the lateral faces intersect one another are its lateral edges

Lateral face

Lateral edge

Page 14: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 3 Vocabulary

• If the lateral edges of a prism are perpendicular to the planes of its bases, the prism is a right prism

• If the lateral edges of a prism are oblique to the planes of its bases, the prism is an oblique prism

• A net is a pattern of a prism’s faces

Page 15: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 3 Vocabulary

• The lateral area of a prism is the sum of the areas of its lateral faces

• The total area of a prism is the sum of its lateral area and the areas of its bases

Page 16: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 4: The Volume of a Prism

• An altitude of a prism is a line segment that connects the planes of its bases and that is perpendicular to both of them

• The volume of an object is the amount of space that it occupies

Page 17: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 4 Vocabulary

• A cross section of a geometric solid is the intersection of a plane and the solid

• Postulate 13: Cavalieri’s PrincipleConsider two geometric solids and a plane.

If every plane parallel to this plane that intersects one of the solids also intersects the other so that the resulting cross sections have equal areas, then the two solids have equal volumes

Page 18: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 4 Vocabulary

• Postulate 14: The volume of any prism is the product of the area of its base and its altitude:

V = Bh• Corollary 1: The volume of a rectangular solid is

the product of its length, width, and height:V = lwh

• Corollary 2: The volume of a cube is the cube if its edge:

V = e³

Page 19: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 5: Pyramids

• A is a plane, R is a polygonal region in plane A, and P is a point not in plane A. The solid made up of all segments that connect P to a point of region R is a pyramid

P

A

R

Page 20: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 5 Vocabulary

• The face of the pyramid that lies on its polygonal region is its base. The rest of its faces are the lateral faces and the edges in which they intersect each other are its lateral edges. The lateral edges meet at the apex of the pyramid.

Apex

Lateral facesLateral edges

Page 21: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 5 Vocabulary

• The altitude of a pyramid is the perpendicular line segment connecting the apex to the plane of its base. It is also the length of this segment.

Altitude

Page 22: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 5 Vocabulary

• Theorem 80: The volume of any pyramid is one-third of the product of the area of its base and its altitude:

V = 1/3Bh

Page 23: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 6: Cylinders and Cones• A cone is just like a pyramid, except with a

circular base instead of a polygonal base• The terms base, apex, and altitude are used in the same

way as they are in pyramids• The axis is the line segment that connects the center of the base to the vertex

• If a cone is right or oblique depends on weather the axis is perp. Or oblique to base

Page 24: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 6: Cylinders and Cones

• A cylinder is made when 2 circular regions on 2 different planes are connected by lines, which are all at the same slope

• Whether or not the cylinder is oblique or right depends on The axis, just like in the cone• Each cylinder has 2 bases

Page 25: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 6: Formulas

CylinderV=Bh

Or

V=

SA=2h+2

ConeV =Bh

Or

V=

SA= rL+ L= slant height

Page 26: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

How To Find The Slant Height In a Right Cone

• Use Pythagorean Theorem:

Page 27: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 7: Spheres• A sphere is the set of all points in space that

are at a given distance from a given point

• Center, Diameter, and Radius

Page 28: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 7 Formulas

•Volume= • SA=

Page 29: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 8: Similar Solids

• Two geometric solids are similar if they have the same shape

Page 30: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 8: Surface Area Comparisons• The ratio of the surface areas of two similar

rectangular solids is equal to the square of the ratio of any pair or corresponding dimensions

• If you set any or the ratios about to r…• =

Page 31: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 8: Volume Comparisons

• The ratio of the volumes of two similar rectangular solids is equal to the cube of any pair of dimensions

• Or…

Page 32: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 8: Theorems

• If the ratio of a pair of corresponding dimensions of two similar solids is r, then the ratio of their surface areas is and the ratio of their volumes is

Page 33: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 9: The Regular Polyhedra

• A regular polyhedron is a convex solid having faces that are congruent regular polygons and having an equal number of polygons that meet at each vertex

Page 34: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 9: Regular Polyhedra (Triangular Faces)

• The are 3 regular polyhedra whose faces are equilateral triangles

• Tetrahedron (4 faces)• Octahedron (8 faces)• Icosahedron (20 faces)

Page 35: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 9: Regular Polyhedra (Square Faces)

• Cube (6 faces)

Page 36: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Lesson 9: Regular Polyhedra (Pentagonal Faces)

• Dodecahedron (12 faces)

Page 37: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Review Problems• Two lines are __________ iff they aren’t

parallel and don’t intersect.• A ______________of a geometric solid is the

intersection of a plane and the solid• The volume of a ________ is the cube of its

edge• A cone will be ___________ if the axis is perp.

It its base• Is a regular polyherdon convex or concave?• What polyhedron has 20 triangular faces?

Page 38: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

More Review Problems

• There is a solid with 9 vertices and 15 edges. How many faces does it have?

• What would the total surface area of this triangular prism be? (the triangle is 45-45-90)

Page 39: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

Even More Review Problems

• What would the volume of this solid be?

Page 40: Chapter 15: Geometric Solids Brian BarrDan Logan.

THE ENDGeometry is just PLANE fun!