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Section 9.3 Perimeter and Area

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Presentation on theme: "Section 9.3 Perimeter and Area"— Presentation transcript:

1 Section 9.3 Perimeter and Area

2 What You Will Learn Perimeter Area

3 Definitions The perimeter, P, of a two-dimensional figure is the sum of the lengths of the sides of the figure. The area, A, is the region within the boundaries of the figure.

4 Formulas Figure Perimeter Area Rectangle P = 2l + 2w A = lw Square
P = 4s A = s2 Parallelogram P = 2b + 2w A = bh Triangle P = s1 + s2 + s3 Trapezoid P = s1 + s2 + b1 + b2

5 Formulas

6 Example 1: Sodding a Lacrosse Field
Rob Marshall wishes to replace the grass (sod) on a lacrosse field. One pallet of Bethel Farms sod costs $175 and covers 450 square feet. If the area to be covered is a rectangle with a length of 330 feet and a width of 270 feet, determine a) The area to be covered with sod.

7 Example 1: Sodding a Lacrosse Field
a) the area to be covered with sod. Solution A = l • w = 330 • 270 = 89,100 ft2

8 Example 1: Sodding a Lacrosse Field
b) Determine how many pallets of sod Rob needs to purchase. Solution Rob needs 198 pallets of sod.

9 Example 1: Sodding a Lacrosse Field
c) Determine the cost of the sod purchased. Solution The cost of 198 pallets of sod is 198 × $175, or $34,650.

10 Pythagorean Theorem The sum of the squares of the lengths of the legs of a right triangle equals the square of the length of the hypotenuse. leg2 + leg2 = hypotenuse2 Symbolically, if a and b represent the lengths of the legs and c represents the length of the hypotenuse (the side opposite the right angle), then a2 + b2 = c2 a b c

11 Example 2: Crossing a Moat
The moat surrounding a castle is 18 ft wide and the wall by the moat of the castle is 24 ft high (see Figure). If an invading army wishes to use a ladder to cross the moat and reach the top of the wall, how long must the ladder be?

12 Example 2: Crossing a Moat
Solution The ladder needs to be at least 30 ft long.

13 Circles A circle is a set of points equidistant from a fixed point called the center. A radius, r, of a circle is a line segment from the center of the circle to any point on the circle. A diameter, d, of a circle is a line segment through the center of the circle with both end points on the circle. r d circumference

14 Circles The circumference is the length of the simple closed curve that forms the circle. r d circumference

15 Example 4: Determining the Shaded Area
Determine the shaded area. Use the π key on your calculator and round your answer to the nearest hundredth.

16 Example 4: Determining the Shaded Area
Solution Height of parallelogram is diameter of circle: 4 ft

17 Example 4: Determining the Shaded Area
Solution Area of parallelogram = bh = 10 • 4 = 40 ft2 Area of circle = πr2 = π(2)2 = 4π ≈ ft2

18 Example 4: Determining the Shaded Area
Solution Area of shaded region = Area of parallelogram – Area of circle Area of shaded region ≈ 40 – 12.57 Area of shaded region ≈ ft2


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