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If the surface areas of two similar figured are 25cm^2 and 36cm^2, and the volume of the larger figure is 216cm^3, what is the volume of the smaller figure?

If the surface areas of two similar figured are 25cm^2 and 36cm^2, and the volume-example-1
User Peter Bagyinszki
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1 Answer

19 votes
19 votes

If two figures are similar, then there is a relation between their areas and volumes:


\begin{gathered} (A_1)/(A_2)=k^2...(1) \\ \\ (V_1)/(V_2)=k^3...(2) \end{gathered}

Where k is a constant. From the problem, we identify:


\begin{gathered} A_1=25\text{ cm}^2 \\ A_2=36\text{ cm}^2 \\ V_2=216\text{ cm}^3 \end{gathered}

Using equation (1):


\begin{gathered} (25)/(36)=k^2 \\ \\ \Rightarrow k=(5)/(6) \end{gathered}

Finally, using (2) to find the volume of the smaller figure:


\begin{gathered} (V_1)/(216)=(5^3)/(6^3) \\ \\ (V_1)/(216)=(125)/(216) \\ \\ \therefore V_1=125\text{ cm}^2 \end{gathered}

User Patrice Neff
by
2.7k points
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