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Published byMagdalene Marsh Modified over 9 years ago
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Space Figures Mr. J. Grossman
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Space Figures Space figures are three-dimensional figures or solids. Space figures are figures whose points do not all lie in the same plane. Space figures have depth in addition to width and height. Common examples: prisms, pyramids, cylinders, cones, and spheres.
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Prism A prism is a polyhedron, with two parallel faces called bases. The other faces are always parallelograms. A prism is named by the shape of its base.prismbasesparallelograms Note: a polyhedron is a solid with flat faces (from Greek poly- meaning "many" and - edron meaning "face"). Each flat surface (or "face") is a polygon.
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Prism A few examples: Hexagonal Prism Rectangular Prism Triangular Prism
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Pyramid A pyramid is a polyhedron that has 3 or more triangular lateral faces sharing a common vertex. The base of a pyramid may be any polygon.polyhedronbasepolygon Square Pyramid Triangular Pyramid
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Pyramid A pyramid has only one base. (The base is the "bottom" of the pyramid.) The other faces are all congruent triangles, and they share a common vertex, which is the top point. The base can be any type of polygon.
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Cylinder A cylinder is a three-dimensional figure having two parallel bases that are congruent circles. A cylinder is not a polyhedron, because it has a curved, not flat, surface.
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Cylinder
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Cone A cone is a three- dimensional figure with one vertex and a circular base.
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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. A sphere is perfectly symmetrical. It has no edges or vertices. It is not a polyhedron.
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Sphere A ball is shaped like a sphere, as is the Earth. A hemisphere is "half of a sphere;" that is, either of the two parts into which the sphere is divided by its equator (or by any circle on the sphere with its center at the center of the sphere).
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Geometry Nets A geometry net is a 2-dimensional shape that can be folded to form a 3-dimensional shape. The net of a three-dimensional object is a representation of its faces in two dimensions. A solid may have different nets.
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Geometry Nets Examples The following nets can be folded along the dotted lines to form cubes.
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Geometry Nets Examples A rectangular prism is formed by folding a net as shown:
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Geometry Nets Examples Net of a rectangular pyramid
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Geometry Nets Examples The net of a cylinder consists of three parts: One circle gives the base and another circle gives the top.circle A rectangle gives the curved surface.rectangle
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Geometry Nets Examples The net of a cone consists of the following two parts: a circle that gives the base; andcircle a sector that gives the curved surfacesector
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Any questions? Euclid was a Greek mathematician, who was also called Euclid of Alexandria. To a lot of folks he is the “Father of Geometry”. He lived around 300bc.
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