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Area of Polygons

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... example, when you have an obtuse triangle the side is slanted ... obtuse triangle ... The base of this obtuse triangle is 4 inches and the height is 8 inches. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Area of Polygons


1
Area of Polygons
  • By Sara Gregurash

2
Area
  • The area of a polygon measures the size of the
    region that the figure occupies. It is
    2-dimensional like a table cloth. It is
    expressed in terms of some square unit. Some
    examples of the units used are square meters,
    square centimeters, square inches, or square
    kilometers.

3
Area of a triangle
  • To find the area of a triangle, you have to
    multiply the base by its height and divide by 2.
    You have to divide by two because a parallelogram
    can be divided into 2 triangles. The area of
    each triangle (2 of them) of a parallelogram is
    equal to one-half the area of the parallelogram.
    The equation is
  • A ½ (bh)
  • The b stands for the base of a triangle. The h
    stands for height. These are shown in the two
    diagrams below.

4
Base and Height
  • The base and height of a triangle have to be
    perpendicular. The base is a side of the
    triangle, but the height isnt always a side of
    the triangle. When you have a right triangle,
    then the height is the side of the triangle
    because it is perpendicular to the base. The
    sides of a triangle arent always perpendicular
    to the base. For example, when you have an obtuse
    triangle the side is slanted (this is shown
    below).

h 8 cm
b 4 cm
5
Area of a right triangle
  • Lets practice finding the area of triangles.
    The same formula is used to find the area of all
    triangles. I will show you how to find the area
    of right, acute, obtuse, scalene, and equilateral
    triangles. Here is an example using right
    triangles.
  • For this triangle, the base is 6 cm and the
    height is 9 cm so you plug those numbers into the
    equation. It looks like this
  • A ½ (2 in 4 in)
  • A ½ (8 in2)
  • A 4 in2

h 4 in
b 2 in
6
Area of an acute and obtuse triangle
  • The base of this acute triangle is 16 centimeters
    and the height is 7 centimeters.
  • A ½ (16 cm 7 cm)
  • A ½ (112 cm2)
  • A 56 cm2
  • The base of this obtuse triangle is 4 inches and
    the height is 8 inches.
  • A ½ (8 in 4 in)
  • A ½ (32 in2)
  • A 16 in2

b 7 cm
b 16 cm
h 8 cm
b 4 cm
7
Area of a scalene triangle
  • A scalene triangle has all sides of different
    lengths.
  • The base of this scalene triangle is 80
    millimeters and the height is 22 millimeters.
  • A ½ (b h)
  • A ½ (80 mm 22 mm)
  • A ½ (1760 mm 2 )
  • A 880 mm 2

b 80 mm
h 22 mm
s 50 mm
8
Area of an equilateral triangle
  • An equilateral triangle is a triangle with three
    equal length sides and the angles are all equal.
  • To find the area of the equilateral triangle
    below with a side of 21 centimeters and the
    altitude is 14 centimeters, you have to use the
    formula.
  • A ½ base or side altitude (height)
  • A ½ (21 cm 14 cm)
  • A ½ (294 cm 2 )
  • A 147 cm 2

side (base) 21 cm
a 14 cm
Math Goodies Lesson is a good site to view to
practice your skills on area of triangles.
9
Area of a square
  • A square is a rectangle with 4 equal sides. To
    find the area of a square you multiply the
    distance along the side of the square by itself.
    The formula looks like this A s s (s is the
    distance along the side of the square)
  • So, the length of each side of this square is 2
    inches.
  • A 2 in 2 in
  • A 4 in2

2 in
10
Area of a rectangle
  • A rectangle is a four-sided polygon that has
    opposite sides equal and are parallel. All four
    angles are right angles that are 90 degrees.
  • To find the area of a rectangle you have to
    multiply the length by the width. The formula
    looks like this A L W (L is the length
    and W is the width of the rectangle)
  • So, the length of this rectangle is 19
    centimeters and the width is 6 centimeters.
  • A 19 cm 6 cm
  • A 114 cm2

6 cm
19 cm
This sites has a lesson on area of squares and
rectangles.
11
Parallelograms
  • A parallelogram is a four-sided shape formed by
    two pairs of parallel lines. The opposite sides
    have the same length and the opposite angles have
    the same degree (size).
  • To find the area of a parallelogram, you have to
    multiply its base by its height. The formula
    looks like this
  • A b h (b is the base and h is the height)
  • The base and height of a parallelogram must be
    perpendicular. The lateral sides of a
    parallelogram are not perpendicular to the base,
    so a dotted line is drawn to represent the
    height.

h
b
12
Area of a parallelogram
  • To find the area of this parallelogram, you
    multiply the base of 8 centimeters and the height
    of 3 centimeters.
  • A b h
  • A 8 cm 3 cm
  • A 24 cm2

h 3 cm
b 8 cm
This site has a lesson about the area of
parallelograms.
13
Trapezoids
  • A trapezoid is a four-sided figure with one pair
    of parallel sides. The bases of the trapezoid
    below are parallel. To find the area of a
    trapezoid, you have to multiply the sum of its
    bases by the height and divided by 2. The
    formula looks like this
  • A 1/2 (b1 b2) h ( b1 is base1, b2 is
    base2, and h is the height)
  • Each base of a trapezoid must be perpendicular to
    the height. The lateral sides of the trapezoid
    arent perpendicular to either of the bases, so a
    dotted line is drawn to represent the height.

b1
h
b2
14
Area of a trapezoid
  • The trapezoid below has a b1 of 14 millimeters,
    b2 of 20 millimeters, and a height of 22
    millimeters. So, the area of this trapezoid is
  • A 1/2 (b1 b2) h
  • A 1/2 (14 mm 20 mm) 22 mm
  • A 1/2 (34 mm) 22 mm
  • A 1/2 748 mm2
  • A 374 mm2

b1 14 mm
h 22 mm
b2 20 mm
This site has a lesson on the area of trapezoids.
15
Practice Websites
  • These sites have great examples of how to find
    the area of polygons and circles. The second one
    is a worksheet to help you practice your skills.
    It is a good idea to take a look at them and see
    if you learn more about area. Then you can take
    the quiz that it provides. After you do that,
    you can move on to my worksheet for more
    practice.
  • Area of Polygons and Circles
  • Worksheet on Area of Polygons and Circles

16
Worksheet Time
  • Now, that you have went through my lesson about
    areas of polygons. So, you can apply what you
    learned with this worksheet. Time to practice!
  • Here are the answers to my worksheet.
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