ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
3D Geometry Videos 15 videos
ACT Math: Plane Geometry Drill 4, Problem 1. What is the radius of the sphere?
ACT Math: Plane Geometry Drill 4, Problem 5. What is the height of the prism?
ACT Math: Plane Geometry Drill 5, Problem 5. How much material do you need to cover the entire tent?
CAHSEE Math 4.4 Measurement and Geometry 182 Views
Share It!
Description:
Measurement and Geometry Drill 4 Problem 4. If the volume of a cube is 8 cubic inches, what is the surface area of the cube in square centimeters?
Transcript
- 00:04
Here’s a question that’s not particularly shmoopy…
- 00:08
If the volume of a cube is 8 cubic inches, what is the surface area of the cube in square centimeters?
- 00:15
And here are the potential answers...
- 00:20
This question is testing, among other things, our sense of, well… common sense.
- 00:24
So… we have this cube. We know its volume is 8 and that the formula for volume is
Full Transcript
- 00:29
base times width times height.
- 00:32
So something times something times something is 8.
- 00:38
And since it’s a cube we know that the numbers must all be the same so….. hint here...
- 00:44
Yep, it’s gotta be the CUBE ROOT of 8 – or, said another way, the only answer that can
- 00:50
make this work is if the sides of the cube are all of length 2 – 2 times 2 times 2 is… 8.
- 00:56
OK, so we know the size of the cube we’re dealing with.
- 01:00
But ah, the twist – the question is asking for the answer in square centimeters – not inches.
- 01:09
And since we know that each of its sides are 2 inches long, we can just convert these to centimeters now.
- 01:16
1 inch equals approximately 2.5 centimeters, so each side length of the cube is 5 centimeters.
- 01:24
We can multiply base times width to get the area of each face of the cube, which is just
- 01:29
5 times 5 here and here… to get an area of 25 square centimeters.
- 01:34
And lastly, note that we have 6 surfaces on the cube – each surface has area 25 –
- 01:40
…multiply them (6 x 25) and we get 150 total square centimeters of surface area.
- 01:48
Which gives us answer C.
- 01:50
Ok… here's something tricky though.
- 01:52
If we had solved through to the surface area of the cube in inches and then converted to
- 01:57
centimeters afterwards, it's actually a bit different.
- 02:00
Let's say we used the 2 inch side lengths, multiplied base times width to get the area
- 02:06
of each face of the cube which is just 2 x 2 here to get an area of 4 square inches...
- 02:11
…and then multiplied by 6 to get a total of 24 total square inches of surface area.
- 02:18
The trick here is that we can't just multiply 24 by 2.5, because even though 1 inch equals
- 02:23
2.5 centimeters, 1 SQUARE inch doesn't equal 2.5 centimeters...
- 02:29
…it equals the quantity 2.5 centimeters SQUARED...2.5 squared equals 6.25.
- 02:38
We can then take 24 times 6.25, which equals 150 square centimeters.
- 02:42
But what do you know… looks like we got C again.
- 02:45
So we won’t have to take this thing to a higher court.
Related Videos
CAHSEE Math: Algebra and Functions Drill 5, Problem 3. Solve the equation.
ACT Math: Plane Geometry Drill 4, Problem 1. What is the radius of the sphere?
ACT Math: Plane Geometry Drill 4, Problem 5. What is the height of the prism?
ACT Math: Plane Geometry Drill 5, Problem 5. How much material do you need to cover the entire tent?