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7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

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Page 1: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

7.4

How Much Does It Hold?

Pg. 11

Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

Page 2: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

7.4 – How Much Does It Hold?___________Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

Today you are going to explore a different measurement found with three-dimensional shapes, called volume.

Page 3: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

7.16 – VOLUMEUsing blocks provided by your teacher, work with your team to build the three-dimensional solid at right. Assume that blocks cannot hover in mid-air. That is, if a block is on the second level, assume that it has a block below it to prop it up.

Page 4: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

a. Is there more than one arrangement of blocks that could look like the solid drawn at right? Why or why not?

Yes, there could be a hidden one in the back left

Page 5: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

b. To avoid confusion, a mat plan can be used to show how the blocks are arranged in the solid. The number in each square represents the number of the blocks stacked in that location if you are looking from above. For example, in the lower right-hand corner, the solid is only 1 block tall, so there is a "1" in the corresponding corner of its mat plan.

Page 6: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

Verify that the solid your team built matches the solid represented in the mat plan above.

Page 7: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

c. What is the volume of the solid? That is, if each block represents a "cubic unit," how many blocks (cubic units) make up this solid?

13 cubic units 13 un3

Page 8: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders
Page 9: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

7.17 – VOLUME TO MAT PLANSFor each of the solids below, build a mat plan for the solid. Then find the volume. Don't forget units.

Page 10: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

0 or 1

3

0

2

2

1

0

1

0

V = 9 u3

orV = 10 u3

Page 11: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

3

1

1

0

1

0

2

1

0

V = 9 u3

Page 12: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

7.18 – MAT PLANS TO VOLUMEFor each of the mat plans below, find the volume of the solid. Don't forget units.

V = 12 u3V = 11 u3

Page 13: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

7.19 – PRISMSPaul built a tower by stacking six identical layers of the shape at right, one on top of each other.

Page 14: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

a. What is the number of cubes on each layer?

7

Page 15: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

b. Make a mat plan of the shape.

6

6

6

0

6

6

6

6

0

Page 16: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

c. What is the volume of his tower?

6

6

6

0

6

6

6

6

0

V = 42 u3

Page 17: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

d. Paul's tower is an example of a prism because it is a solid and two of its faces (called bases) are congruent and parallel. A prism also has sides that connect the bases (called lateral faces).

For each of the prisms below, find the volume. Be ready to share any shortcuts you have developed. Don't forget any units.

Page 18: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

4

5

20 un3

Page 19: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

6

4

24 un3

Page 20: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

12

5

60 un3

Page 21: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

7.20 – VOLUME OF ANY PRISMCome up with a formula that will work to find the volume of any prism.

V = BH

Page 22: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

7.21 – SPECIAL PRISMSThe prism at right is called a triangular prism because the two congruent bases are triangles.

a. Shade in the bases of the prism. Find the area of the base of the prism.

A = ½(3)(4)

A = 6 cm2

Page 23: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

b. Find the volume of the triangular prism.

V = BH

V = (6)(9)

V = 54 cm3

Page 24: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

7.22 – HEXAGONAL PRISMSWhat if the bases are hexagonal, like the one shown at right?

a. Why are the bases the hexagons and not the rectangles? Shade in one of the bases.

Hexagons are congruent parallel bases

Page 25: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

b. Find the area of the hexagonal base. Leave answers in square root form.

30

444 3

18 4 3 6

2A

296 3A cm

Page 26: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

c. Find the volume of the hexagonal prism. Leave answers in square root form.

30

444 3

V BH

2480 3V cm

96 3 5V

Page 27: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

7.23 – CYLINDERSCarter wonders, "What if the bases are circular?"

a. Shade in one base of the circular prism. Change the volume formula to include circles.

V BH2V r H

Page 28: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

b. Find the volume. Don't forget units. Leave answers in terms of .

2V r H

25 8V

3200V un

Page 29: 7.4 How Much Does It Hold? Pg. 11 Volume of Prisms and Cylinders

2SA r r

27SA 7 1549SA 105

2154SA in