Math Antics - Perimeter - Free Educational videos for Students in K-12 | Lumos Learning

Math Antics - Perimeter - Free Educational videos for Students in k-12


Math Antics - Perimeter - By Mathantics



Transcript
00:03 Uh huh Hi , welcome to Math Antics . In
00:08 this lesson , we're going to learn about an important
00:10 concept in geometry called perimeter perimeter is just a fancy
00:15 math term . That means the distance or length around
00:18 the shape . But what exactly does the distance around
00:21 a shape mean ? Well , distance or length is
00:25 a one dimensional quantity that we can measure with units
00:28 like centimeters , inches or miles . That means that
00:31 perimeter is also a one dimensional quantity that we can
00:35 measure with units of length . For example the perimeter
00:38 of a shape when it be just 10 , but
00:41 it could be 10 cm or instead of being just
00:44 25 , it could be 25 miles . The units
00:47 are really important when you're talking about perimeter . Okay
00:52 , but what exactly do we mean by around a
00:54 shape ? It seems like there would be a lot
00:56 of different ways to go around the shape . Some
00:58 of them would be short and some of them would
01:00 be very long . Well , perimeter means the absolute
01:05 shortest distance possible around the shape . That would be
01:08 the distance you'd get if you trace the path exactly
01:11 around the border or edge of a shape , a
01:14 good way to see what perimeter is is to imagine
01:17 that you could walk right along the edge of a
01:19 shape like this five sided polygon . Imagine starting at
01:23 one of the polygons , vortices and then walking along
01:25 each side until you got all the way back to
01:28 the point that you started from the total distance you
01:31 traveled would be the perimeter of that shape . In
01:34 this case , if the length of each side of
01:37 the Polygon was 10 m , the total length you
01:40 would travel along all five . Science would add up
01:42 to 50 m . Like another good way to see
01:46 what perimeter is is to imagine that you could take
01:48 a shape like this square and break it at one
01:51 of its corners . Then you could unfold the shape
01:54 until it formed a straight line . The length of
01:57 that line is the perimeter of the shape . Doing
02:00 this helps you understand why perimeter is a one dimensional
02:03 quantity , even though it applies to two dimensional shapes
02:06 like this square , It's one dimensional because it's the
02:09 distance of the lines that go around the two dimensional
02:12 shape . Okay , so now that you know what
02:16 perimeter is , how do we measure or calculate it
02:19 for different geometric shapes ? Well that depends on the
02:22 shapes . Finding the perimeter of shapes that have curves
02:26 like circles or hearts or things like that can be
02:29 tricky . In fact , we'll wait and talk about
02:32 the perimeter of a circle in another video . In
02:34 this video , we're just going to focus on how
02:37 to find the perimeter of polygons . Since polygons are
02:40 made from only straight sides , it's easy to find
02:43 their perimeter . If you know the length of each
02:45 side . All you have to do is add them
02:47 up and the total length you wind up with is
02:50 the perimeter of the polygon . Mhm . Let's try
02:53 doing that with a few examples . So you see
02:54 how it works . The first polygon will try as
02:57 a triangle . This triangle has three sides that are
03:00 each a different length , three cm 4 cm and
03:04 five cm . Now to find the perimeter of the
03:08 triangle . All we have to do is add up
03:10 the length of those three sides , three plus four
03:13 plus five equals 12 . But don't forget , it's
03:17 not just 12 , it's 12cm . Always remember to
03:21 also put down the units of the Perimeter . Okay
03:24 , that was easy . Let's try another one .
03:27 This time , our polygon is a rectangle and you
03:29 can see that the shorter sides are each five m
03:32 long And the longer sites are each 10 m long
03:36 . So let's add them all up . We can
03:39 add up the sides in any order . We want
03:40 to as long as we don't forget any sides or
03:43 accidentally count any of them twice . And I think
03:46 I'll add up the two short sides first five plus
03:49 five equals 10 . Next I'll add up the two
03:52 longer sites , 10 plus 10 equals 20 . And
03:56 now if I add up those two answers , I'll
03:58 get the total for all four sides . 10 plus
04:01 20 equals 30 . So the perimeter of this rectangle
04:05 is 30 meters . You thought I was going to
04:08 forget my units , didn't you not this time .
04:12 Uh , here's another good example . This is a
04:15 six cited regular polygon . A regular polygon means that
04:19 all its sides are exactly the same length . And
04:22 that's good because this diagram only shows the length of
04:25 one side 4cm . But since the polygon is regular
04:29 , we know that all the other sides are also
04:32 four cm long . Now we could just add up
04:36 all the sides like we did before , but since
04:38 they're all the same we can use multiplication as a
04:41 shortcut . That's because multiplication is really just repeated addition
04:45 . All we have to do is multiply the number
04:47 of sides . Six by the length of the sides
04:50 . Four centimeters six times four equals 24 . So
04:54 that means the total perimeter must be 24 24 .
04:57 What centimeters ? That's better . And this formula works
05:03 for any regular polygon , no matter how many sides
05:05 there are . If the sides are all the same
05:08 length , you can just multiply the number of sides
05:11 by the side length and you have the perimeter .
05:14 Okay , let's try one more example , this polygon
05:18 also has six sides but it's not regular polygon .
05:21 The sides are different lengths and this one is really
05:23 tricky because they only show us the length of four
05:26 of the sides . The other two are missing .
05:28 So how can we figure them out ? Problems like
05:31 this come up all the time and math problems where
05:34 you aren't quite given all the information when you have
05:36 this kind of problem . The key is to use
05:39 what you do know to figure out what you don't
05:41 know . Here's what I mean . Look closely at
05:44 the two vertical sides that we do know the length
05:47 of four and 6" . Now imagine that those two
05:52 vertical sides could be moved straight across to the other
05:55 side , the side that we don't know the length
05:57 of . By doing that , you can see that
05:59 the missing length would just be the combination of the
06:02 two vertical length that we do know four and 6"
06:06 . And since four plus six equals 10 , The
06:09 missing vertical side must be 10 long . Notice that
06:13 we can do the same thing for the horizontal sides
06:15 that we do know if we imagine those moving down
06:18 to the side that we don't know , we see
06:20 that its length must be equal to the combination of
06:23 those two lengths . 10 inches plus five inches equals
06:26 15 inches . There we've used the lengths that we
06:30 did know to figure out the lengths that we didn't
06:32 know . And now that we know the length of
06:34 all the sides , we can just add them all
06:36 up to get the perimeter . Four plus five plus
06:40 six equals 15 . And then 15 plus 15 equals
06:44 30 . 30 plus 10 equals 40 . And last
06:49 of all , 40 plus 10 equals 50 . So
06:53 the sum of all the sides is 50 and that's
06:56 the perimeter of this shape . And that's the end
07:00 of this lesson . We've learned that perimeter is the
07:03 distance or length around a geometric shape and we've learned
07:06 how to calculate it for any polygon . You just
07:09 add up the length of all the sides and the
07:12 total length is the perimeter . Oh and don't forget
07:16 your units . Also don't forget that to get good
07:19 at Math . Takes practice . Thanks for watching Math
07:22 Antics and I'll see you next time . Learn more
07:26 at Math Antics dot com .
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