11.3 areas of regular polygons and circles

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11.3 Areas of Regular Polygons and Circles By Alysa Smith and Erin McCoy!!!!!!

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11.3 Areas of Regular Polygons and Circles. By Alysa Smith and Erin McCoy!!!!!!. Objectives. Find areas of regular polygons Find areas of circles. Areas of Regular Polygons. Recall that in a regular polygon, all angles are congruent and all sides are congruent. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: 11.3 Areas of Regular Polygons and Circles

11.3 Areas of Regular Polygons and Circles

By Alysa Smith and Erin McCoy!!!!!!

Page 2: 11.3 Areas of Regular Polygons and Circles

Find areas of regular polygons Find areas of circles

Page 3: 11.3 Areas of Regular Polygons and Circles

Areas of Regular PolygonsRecall that in a regular polygon, all angles are

congruent and all sides are congruent. A segment drawn from the center of a regular

polygon to a side of the polygon and is perpendicular to the side is called an apothemapothem.

GH is an apothem of hexagonABCDEF

So, GH is perpendicular to ED

A B

C

DE

FG

H

Page 4: 11.3 Areas of Regular Polygons and Circles

If a regular polygon has an area of A square units, a perimeter of P units, and an apothem of a units, then…

A=1/2Pa

Page 5: 11.3 Areas of Regular Polygons and Circles

Example 1:

Find the area of a regular pentagon with a perimeter of 40 cm.

Page 6: 11.3 Areas of Regular Polygons and Circles

Because it is a regular pentagon, all angles add up to equal 360, and all angles are congruent. Therefore, the measure of each angle is 360 divided by 5 or 72. FG is an apothem of pentagon ABCDE. It bisects < EFD and is a perpendicular bisector of ED. The m< DFE = ½ (72) or 36.Because the perimeter is 40 cm, each side is 8 cm and GD is 4 cm.

tan < DFG = GD/FG

tan 36 = 4/FG

(FG) tan 36 = 4

FG = 4/tan 36

FG ≈ 5.5

A = ½ Pa

A= ½ (40)(5.5)

A ≈110

The area of the pentagon is ≈110 cm sq.

Page 7: 11.3 Areas of Regular Polygons and Circles

Areas of Circles

If a circle has an area of A sq. units and a radius of r units then

A = r sq.

r

Page 8: 11.3 Areas of Regular Polygons and Circles

Example 2:Example 2:

Find the area of circle P with a circumference of 52 in.

Page 9: 11.3 Areas of Regular Polygons and Circles

To find the radius of circle, find the diameter.

d = Circumference/pi or d = 52/pi

The diameter of circle P is 16.6. Since the radius is half the diameter, the radius is 8.4.

A = pi r squared

A = pi(8.4)squared

The area of circle P is 221.7 in sq.

Page 10: 11.3 Areas of Regular Polygons and Circles

Find the area of the shaded region. Assume the triangle is equilateral.

Page 11: 11.3 Areas of Regular Polygons and Circles

The area of the shaded region is the difference of the area of the circle and the area of the triangle.

A = pi r sq.

A= pi (4) sq.

A= about 50.3

To find the area of the triangle, use properties of 30-60-90 triangles.First, find the length of the base.The hypotenuse of triangle ABC is 4.BC = 2√3, so EC = 4√3 Next, find the height of the triangle, DB. Since m<DCB is 60, DB = 2√3 (√3) or 6.

A = ½ bh

A = ½ (4√3) (6)

A = about 20.8; the area of the shaded region is 50.3 – 20.8 or 29.5 m sq.

Page 12: 11.3 Areas of Regular Polygons and Circles

Assignment

Pg. 613 # 8-22, 23-27