Volume of Rectangular Prisms - Free Educational videos for Students in K-12 | Lumos Learning

Volume of Rectangular Prisms - Free Educational videos for Students in k-12


Volume of Rectangular Prisms - By Anywhere Math



Transcript
00:0-1 Welcome to anywhere , Math . I'm Jeff Jacobson and
00:01 today we're gonna learn how to find the volume of
00:04 rectangular prisms . Let's get started . Before we get
00:26 to this example , let's talk about what exactly volume
00:29 is the volume of a solid measures the amount of
00:32 space it occupies . Another word for that is its
00:35 capacity . Okay . That's what volume is . Okay
00:40 . Instead of surface area where you're going around the
00:42 outside , right ? The face is the area of
00:44 all the faces . Now we're talking about the inside
00:47 how much space it occupies . You see volume all
00:51 the time . When you go to the grocery store
00:53 and you buy a coke , you see maybe it's
00:55 a liter bottle of coke . That's how much ,
00:59 that's the capacity . That's how much coke is in
01:01 that bottle . That's volume . Or you buy a
01:03 gallon of milk , right ? A gallon , that's
01:06 the volume of milk in that bottle . Um ,
01:09 when you have things that are small , it can
01:11 be very easy to measure volume . Right ? If
01:13 you're if you're cooking using something like a measuring cup
01:17 , right , with your recipe , well , you're
01:19 measuring volume how much milk you might need for to
01:22 make some cookies or something . And if it's liquid
01:24 , it's it's quite easy to measure volume . But
01:27 when we have something that's solid , where we couldn't
01:29 just pour in here and figure out how much is
01:31 in there , it's more difficult . Or if you
01:34 have something like a swimming pool , it would take
01:37 a really long time to just do this with all
01:40 the water and figure out the volume of that swimming
01:42 pool . So instead we have formulas that we can
01:46 use to find the volume of things like that .
01:49 So we're not going to use this today . Uh
01:52 let's get to our first example and figure out how
01:54 you can use math to find volume . Okay ,
01:57 example , one find the volume of the prism .
02:00 Now , first , this is a rectangular prism and
02:04 with a rectangular prism or a square prism , there's
02:07 two formulas that we can use uh to find the
02:10 volume of this first one you may be familiar with
02:13 and that's just volume equals length , times width ,
02:17 times height . Okay , so length here times the
02:22 width , how deep it goes back times the height
02:26 . Right ? That will give you the volume .
02:28 Uh your units are always going to be cubic units
02:31 . Remember , because this is three dimensional and we're
02:33 doing meters times meters , times meters . So at
02:36 the very end , I just gotta remember , I'm
02:38 gonna have meters cubed . Ok . Um but if
02:42 we think about this , this first part length times
02:45 with , well that's going to give us the area
02:49 of our base , which is right here . So
02:56 the other and there were times in it by the
02:59 height , basically . How how much you can think
03:01 of it when you find that area of that base
03:05 times it by the height . So it's like you're
03:07 raising that up , you're stretching that out and filling
03:10 that space . Um and that will give you that
03:12 volume . So the other forms that I'm going to
03:15 show you is volume equals area of the base ,
03:20 which we use a capital B to represent that times
03:24 the height . Okay , that's another formula . And
03:27 the nice thing about this , so area of the
03:33 base . Okay . Area of the base . Yeah
03:38 , these both would work for this because basically when
03:41 you do length times width , that is the area
03:43 of the base , right ? And then your times
03:44 into by height . The nice thing about this is
03:48 that I'm going to put a star next to this
03:51 , is that it will work for any prisms .
03:54 If you have a triangular prism you find the area
03:57 of the base , that area of that triangle ,
04:00 times it by the height . If you have a
04:02 pentagonal prism , find the area that pentagon and then
04:06 multiply it by the height , even cylinders . When
04:09 you get two cylinders , you find the area of
04:11 that circle , that base circle times it by the
04:14 height and that will give you the volume . So
04:16 that's a really useful um really useful formula because it
04:21 can work for so many different types of solids .
04:24 Whereas this only is going to work for rectangular or
04:28 a square prism . Okay , um so just make
04:32 sure you you know both of those . Uh we're
04:35 only going to be dealing with rectangular prisms in this
04:38 lesson . So it's not a big deal to to
04:42 worry about that . Anyway , let's solve for volume
04:45 . So let's go ahead blank times with Time's tight
04:49 . So volume is going to be 78 times one
04:54 half times the height . Just five , eight .
05:02 Any time a multiplying fractions , I'm always hoping and
05:04 trying to simplify first . Unfortunately , here there is
05:08 nothing that I can simplify . Uh , so I'm
05:12 just multiplying straight across . Seven times one is seven
05:14 times five is 35 . Uh , I'm sorry .
05:20 That's supposed to be 1/2 My fault . one half
05:25 . Okay , I'm gonna do eight times 8 at
05:27 64 times two is 128 . And then if you
05:31 remember the thing , you gotta remember units at the
05:34 very end meters , transmitters , transmitters will give me
05:37 meters cube and you show that with a little three
05:42 up there . Okay . Instead of squared . Right
05:46 ? So if I'll answer 35 over 128 m cubed
05:51 . Here's something to try on your own . Here's
06:00 our last example . Find the height . So they
06:04 give us a rectangular prism . They tell us the
06:07 volume already The volume is 1,792" cube or cubic inches
06:14 . But they want us to find the height .
06:16 We don't know the height . So what we're gonna
06:18 do is we're gonna set up an equation and uh
06:21 solve for h solve for height . So we know
06:25 that the formula is lifetime's worth times height will give
06:29 us the volume right ? Volume equals length , times
06:33 width , times height . Now let's substitute in the
06:36 things , we know what we know the volume .
06:38 So that's 1,792 . We know the length 7" .
06:45 We know the width 16" . We don't know the
06:50 height , that's our unknown . Uh So here's our
06:55 equation we're gonna solve for H . First thing I'm
06:57 gonna do is I'm gonna simplify it a little .
06:59 So 1792 7 times 16 . Well that's 71 12
07:08 , whoops ! 100 12 Times 812 H . Mhm
07:15 . Hopefully you remember a little bit of algebra .
07:18 So I've been one step equation . Uh This is
07:20 100 and 12 times H . So to undo that
07:23 multiplication I need to divide both sides by 112 .
07:29 Keep that equation balance . Uh That becomes one and
07:33 goes away so I get H . Is equal to
07:37 well let's see . Um I'll go ahead . I've
07:40 got room over here . I'm not really sure .
07:43 So let's do some Division 792 . 1 12 .
07:50 Can you see that ? Yes . 112 into that
07:53 goes once . 1 12 to track . I get
07:56 76 Bring down the two 112 into that . Let's
08:03 try six times six times that is 12 , carry
08:07 the 1676 . Perfect . Okay , so H is
08:14 16 . Now I got to remember my units .
08:17 These were all inches so final answer . The height
08:22 is equal to 16 inches . Yeah , 9" cubes
08:28 . Remember that was for the volume . This is
08:30 just height . So 16" . Here's some more to
08:34 try on your own . Thank you so much for
08:42 watching and if you like this video , please subscribe
08:51 . Yeah .
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