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Shape and Space - Properties of 2D and 3D Shapes

Grade 3IB

Review the key concepts, formulae, and examples before starting your quiz.

🔑Concepts

2D2D shapes are flat figures that have only two dimensions: length and width. Common examples include squares, rectangles, and triangles. A square is a 2D2D shape that has four equal sides and four right angles, appearing as a perfectly balanced box on paper.

The properties of 2D2D shapes include sides (the straight or curved lines that make the boundary) and vertices (the corner points where two sides meet). For instance, a circle is a unique 2D2D shape with 11 continuous curved side and 00 vertices, looking like a ring or a plate.

3D3D shapes are solid objects that have three dimensions: length, width, and height (or depth). Unlike flat 2D2D shapes, 3D3D shapes take up space. A cube is a 3D3D shape where all six faces are identical squares, similar to a dice or a sugar cube.

In 3D3D geometry, we identify parts using faces, edges, and vertices. A 'Face' is a flat surface; an 'Edge' is the line where two faces meet; and a 'Vertex' is the point where three or more edges meet. Imagine a cereal box (a rectangular prism): it has 66 faces, 1212 edges, and 88 vertices.

Curved 3D3D shapes include spheres, cylinders, and cones. A sphere is perfectly round like a ball with only 11 curved surface; a cylinder has 22 flat circular faces and 11 curved surface like a soda can; a cone has 11 flat circular face that tapess to a single point called an apex, like a party hat.

Polygons are closed 2D2D shapes with straight sides. A regular polygon has all sides and all angles equal (like a regular pentagon), while an irregular polygon has sides of different lengths and different angles (like a lopsided triangle).

Line Symmetry occurs when a shape can be folded along a line so that the two halves match exactly. This line is called the 'axis of symmetry.' For example, a butterfly or the letter 'A' can be split vertically down the middle into two identical mirror images.

Prisms and Pyramids are specific types of 3D3D shapes. A prism has two identical ends (bases) and flat rectangular sides, such as a triangular prism that looks like a tent. A pyramid has one base and triangular sides that all meet at one top vertex, looking like the Great Pyramids of Egypt.

📐Formulae

Perimeter of a Square: P=4×sP = 4 \times s

Perimeter of a Rectangle: P=2×(l+w)P = 2 \times (l + w) or P=l+l+w+wP = l + l + w + w

Perimeter of a Triangle: P=a+b+cP = a + b + c

Euler's Formula for Polyhedrons: F+VE=2F + V - E = 2 (where FF = Faces, VV = Vertices, EE = Edges)

💡Examples

Problem 1:

A rectangular garden has a length of 1212 meters and a width of 55 meters. What is the total perimeter of the garden?

Solution:

Step 1: Use the perimeter formula for a rectangle: P=2×(l+w)P = 2 \times (l + w). \ Step 2: Substitute the given values: P=2×(12+5)P = 2 \times (12 + 5). \ Step 3: Add the length and width first: P=2×17P = 2 \times 17. \ Step 4: Multiply by 22 to find the final result: P=34P = 34 meters.

Explanation:

To find the perimeter, we add all the outer boundary lines of the 2D2D shape together. Since opposite sides of a rectangle are equal, we sum the length and width and double the result.

Problem 2:

Identify the number of faces, vertices, and edges for a square-based pyramid and verify using Euler's formula.

Solution:

Step 1: Count the faces. There is 11 square base and 44 triangular sides, so F=5F = 5. \ Step 2: Count the vertices. There are 44 corners on the base and 11 apex at the top, so V=5V = 5. \ Step 3: Count the edges. There are 44 edges on the base and 44 edges leading to the top, so E=8E = 8. \ Step 4: Apply Euler's formula: 5+58=25 + 5 - 8 = 2.

Explanation:

A square-based pyramid is a 3D3D shape. By identifying its flat surfaces (faces), its points (vertices), and its lines (edges), we can confirm its properties. The calculation 108=210 - 8 = 2 confirms that the count is correct according to geometric laws.