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Surface Area
If the surface area of solid shape is 4cm^2 what can we infer about the shape?
Not a sphere (pi would lead to decimals)?
Same for cones and cylinders?
Pyramid?
Or does 4cm^2 have a square ‘ring’ to it? Should we be thinking cube/cuboid?
Also, at GCSE level (UK), or at any level for that matter, does 'solid shape' refer to 'straightforward' solid shapes, as opposed to the 3d versions of compound shapes?
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Where did that question spring from.
If r = 0.546189584... then a sphere's surface area = 4, so you cannot rule that out.
A cuboid 1 by 1 by 0.5 has surface area 4.
A cube with side 0.816497.... has surface area 4.
There are loads of possible shapes so there's not a lot you can say for certain. A sphere has minimal surface area so you can probably say at least 1 dimension will be over the r given above. You can probably get an upper bound for the shapes dimensions and I think that's about it.
A solid shape could certainly be a compound shape.
Bob
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Where did that question spring from.
If r = 0.546189584... then a sphere's surface area = 4, so you cannot rule that out.
A cuboid 1 by 1 by 0.5 has surface area 4.
A cube with side 0.816497.... has surface area 4.
There are loads of possible shapes so there's not a lot you can say for certain. A sphere has minimal surface area so you can probably say at least 1 dimension will be over the r given above. You can probably get an upper bound for the shapes dimensions and I think that's about it.
A solid shape could certainly be a compound shape.
Bob
Can this be a question with many possible answers? Some questions will say this: MANY DIFFERENT ANSWERS IS POSSIBLE.
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