Applied Geometry Lesson 10 5 Areas of Regular
- Slides: 11
Applied Geometry Lesson: 10 – 5 Areas of Regular Polygons Objective: Learn to find the areas of regular polygons.
Polygons Center – A point in the interior of every polygon that is equidistant from all the vertices. Apothem – A segment drawn from the center perpendicular to the side of a regular polygon.
Area of a Regular Polygon If a regular polygon has an area of A square units, an apothem of a units, and a perimeter of P units, then
Find the area of the regular polygon.
The game has a hexagon shaped board. Find its area.
Find the area of the shaded region in the regular figure. Area of Pentagon Area of triangle Area of shaded region Pentagon - Triangle
Find the area of the shaded region of the regular figure. Area of Octagon Area of Trapezoid Area of shaded region Octagon – Trapezoid.
Significant digits Precision in a measurement is usually expressed by the number of significant digits reported.
Significant digits Nonzero digits are always significant In whole numbers, zeros are significant if they fall between nonzero digits. In decimal numbers greater than or equal to 1, every digit is significant. In decimal numbers less than 1, the first nonzero digit and every digit to the right are significant.
Determine the number of significant digits. 779, 000 mi 3 significant digits Look at rule for whole numbers. 50, 008 ft 5 significant digits Look at rule for whole numbers 430. 008 m 6 significant digits Look at rule of decimals > 1 0. 00750 cm 3 significant digits Look at rule of decimals < 1 230. 004500 9 significant digits Look at rule of decimals > 1
Homework Pg. 428 2 – 6 all, 8 – 22 E l Don’t do #1 & 3
- 11-4 areas of regular polygons
- 11-4 areas of regular polygons and composite figures
- Practice 7-5 areas of regular polygons
- Areas of polygons and circles
- Area of regular polygon
- When you apply the ipde process
- Areas of regular polygons
- Chapter 5 managing risk with the ipde process
- Regular grammar generates regular language
- Geometry area of regular polygons
- Lewis dot structure and molecular geometry
- Electron domain geometry vs molecular geometry