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Reteach 2

This document provides examples for calculating the surface area of prisms, cylinders, and other geometric shapes. It includes sample problems and solutions for finding surface area of rectangles, triangles, cylinders, spheres and other figures by adding the areas of individual faces.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
28 views2 pages

Reteach 2

This document provides examples for calculating the surface area of prisms, cylinders, and other geometric shapes. It includes sample problems and solutions for finding surface area of rectangles, triangles, cylinders, spheres and other figures by adding the areas of individual faces.

Uploaded by

wesam261
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Name ________________________________________ Date __________________ Class __________________

LESSON
Surface Area of Prisms and Cylinders
19-2
Reteach

The surface area of a figure is the total area of the


faces of the figure. For example, the figure is a
rectangular prism with six faces. The surface
area is the sum of the areas of the six faces.
The top and bottom faces each have an area of 24 cm2, the
front and back each have an area of 60 cm2, and the left and
right each have an area of 10 cm2. The total surface area would
be ( 2 i 24 ) + ( 2 i 60 ) + ( 2 i 10 ) = 48 + 120 + 20 = 188 cm2.

The best strategy for calculating the surface area of a figure is to identify
the parts that make up the figure (triangles, parallelograms, etc.),
calculate their surface areas, and add the areas of the parts together.

Calculate the surface area of the figures shown below.

1. S = ________________ 2. S = _________________ 3. S = _______________

The surface area of a cylinder can be found by adding the


areas of the two bases and the area of the curved surface
that wraps around the cylinder.
The area of the two bases in the figure is 2 i π i 62 = 72π
The curved area is the circumference of the base times
the height, which is 10 i 12 i π = 120π . The total surface area
is 192π ≈ 603.19 in2.

Calculate the surface area of the cylinders shown below.

4. S = _______________ 5. S = _______________ 6. S = _______________

Original content Copyright © by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. Additions and changes to the original content are the responsibility of the instructor.
125
Reteach 17-2 3. rectangle
1 2
1. x 2 = 16 y ; y = x
16
1 2
2. x 2 = −4 y ; y = − x
4
3. ( x − 3 ) = −4 ( y − 1)
2

Reteach 18-1
4. triangle
1. 240 in3
2. 288 ft3
3. 625 cm3
4. 2010.62 cm3
5. 27 ft3
Reteach 18-2
1. 80 in3
5. circle
2. 128 in3
3. 41.67 m3
4. two pyramids and a rectangular prism
5. Vprism = 8 m3; Vpyramids ≈ 26.67 m3
6. V = 61.34 m3
Reteach 18-3
1. 113.10 ft3
2. 10,857.34 cm3
Reteach 19-2
3. 5,428,672.11 mm3
1. 54 cm2
4. cylinder; cone
2 108 cm2
3
5. 804.25 cm
3. 240 in2
3
6. 1072.33 cm
4. 502.65 in2
3
7. 1876.58 cm
5. 942.48 cm2
Reteach 18-4 6. 150.80 ft2
1. 904.78 cm3
Reteach 19-3
2. 2144.66 ft3
1. 48 ft2
3
3. 523.60 in
2. 252 cm2
4. cone; sphere
3. 400 ft2
3
5. 33.51 in
4. 301.59 ft2
3
6. 16.76 in
5. 763.41 m2
3
7. 50.27 in
6. 703.72 in2
Reteach 19-1 Reteach 19-4
1. cylinder
1. 804.25 in2
2. pyramid
2. 1809.56 cm2
3. 1256.64 ft2
Original content Copyright © by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. Additions and changes to the original content are the responsibility of the instructor.
429

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