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Simila r Polygo ns Chapter 7-2

Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

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Identify similar figures. Solve problems involving scale factors. similar polygons scale factor Standard 11.0 Students determine how changes in dimensions affect the perimeter, area, and volume of common geometric figures and solids. Lesson 2 MI/Vocab

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Page 1: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

Similar PolygonsChapter 7-2

Page 2: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

Lesson 2 MI/Vocab

• similar polygons• scale factor

• Identify similar figures.• Solve problems involving scale factors.

Standard 11.0 Students determine how changes in dimensions affect the perimeter, area, and volume of common geometric figures and solids.

Page 3: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

Similar Polygons• Have congruent corresponding angles.• Have proportional corresponding sides.• “~” means “is similar to”

A

BD

C

F

G

H

E

HEDA

GHCD

FGBC

EFAB

ABCD ~ EFGH

A E

B F

C G

D H

Page 4: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

Writing Similarity Statements• Decide if the polygons are similar. If they

are, write a similarity statement.A B

C

D

6

12

915

W

X

Z

Y

10

8

6

4

23

46

WYAB

23

69

YZBC

23

812

ZXCD

23

1015

XWDA

A WB YC ZD X

All corr. sides are proportionate and all corr. angles are

ABCD ~ WYZX

Page 5: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

Scale Factor• The ratio of the lengths of two corresponding

sides.• In the previous example the scale factor is 3:2.

Page 6: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

Lesson 2 Ex1

Similar Polygons

A. Determine whether each pair of figures is similar. Justify your answer.

The vertex angles are marked as 40º and 50º, so they are not congruent.

Page 7: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

Similar Polygons

Answer: None of the corresponding angles are congruent, so the triangles are not similar.

Since both triangles are isosceles, the base angles in

each triangle are congruent. In the first triangle, the base

angles measure and in the second

triangle, the base angles measure

Page 8: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

Similar Polygons

B. Determine whether each pair of figures is similar. Justify your answer.

All the corresponding angles are congruent.

Page 9: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

Similar Polygons

Now determine whether corresponding sides are proportional.

The ratios of the measures of the corresponding sides are equal.

Answer: The ratio of the measures of the corresponding sides are equal and the corresponding angles are congruent, so ΔABC ~ ΔRST.

Page 10: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

A. Yes, ΔAXE ~ ΔWRT.

B. Yes, ΔAXE ~ ΔRWT.

C. No, the Δ's are not ~.

D. not enough information

A. Determine whether the pair of figures is similar.

Page 11: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

A. Yes, ΔTRS ~ ΔNGA.

B. Yes, ΔTRS ~ ΔGNA.

C. No, the Δ's are not ~.

D. not enough information

B. Determine whether the pair of figures is similar.

Page 12: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

ARCHITECTURE An architect prepared a 12-inch model of a skyscraper to look like a real 1100-foot building. What is the scale factor of the model compared to the real building?

Before finding the scale factor you must make sure that both measurements use the same unit of measure.1 foot = 12 inches

Page 13: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

Answer: The ratio comparing the two heights is

or 1:1100. The scale factor is , which

means that the model is the height of the

real skyscraper.

Animation:Similar Polygons

Page 14: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

A space shuttle is about 122 feet in length. The Science Club plans to make a model of the space shuttle with a length of 24 inches. What is the scale factor of the model compared to the real space shuttle?A.

B.

C.

D.

Page 15: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

Proportional Parts and Scale Factor

A. The two polygons are similar. Write a similarity statement. Then find x, y, and UV.

Use the congruent angles to write the corresponding vertices in order.polygon ABCDE ~ polygon RSTUV

Page 16: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

Proportional Parts and Scale Factor

Now write proportions to find x and y.

To find x:

Similarity proportion

Cross products

Multiply.

Divide each side by 4.

Page 17: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

Proportional Parts and Scale Factor

To find y:

Similarity proportion

Cross products

Multiply.Subtract 6 from each side.

Divide each side by 6 and simplify.

AB = 6, RS = 4, DE = 8, UV = y + 1

Page 18: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

Proportional Parts and Scale Factor

Page 19: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

Proportional Parts and Scale Factor

B. The two polygons are similar. Find the scale factor of polygon ABCDE to polygon RSTUV.

The scale factor is the ratio of the lengths of any two corresponding sides.

Answer:

Page 20: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

A. TRAP ~ OZDL

B. TRAP ~ OLDZ

C. TRAP ~ ZDLO

D. TRAP ~ ZOLD

A. The two polygons are similar. Write a similarity statement.

Page 21: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

A. a = 1.4

B. a = 3.75

C. a = 2.4

D. a = 2

B. The two polygons are similar. Solve for a.

Page 22: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

C. The two polygons are similar. Solve for b.

A. b = 7.2

B. b = 1.2

C.

D. b = 7.2

Page 23: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

D. The two polygons are similar. Solve for ZO.

A. 7.2

B. 1.2

C. 2.4

D.

Page 24: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

1. A2. B3. C4. D

E. The two polygons are similar. What is the scale factor of polygon TRAP to polygon ZOLD?

A.

B.

C.

D.

Page 25: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

Rectangle WXYZ is similar to rectangle PQRS with a scale factor of 1.5. If the length and width of PQRS are 10 meters and 4 meters, respectively, what are the length and width of rectangle WXYZ?

Enlargement or Reduction of a Figure

Write proportions for finding side measures. Let one long side of each WXYZ and PQRS be and one short side of each WXYZ and PQRS be

Page 26: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

Enlargement or Reduction of a Figure

WXYZPQRS

WXYZPQRS

Page 27: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

A. 9.8 in, 19.6 in

B. 7 in, 14 in

C. 6 in, 12 in

D. 5 in, 10 in

Quadrilateral GCDE is similar to quadrilateral JKLM

with a scale factor of . If two of the sides of GCDE

measure 7 inches and 14 inches, what are the lengths

of the corresponding sides of JKLM?

Page 28: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

Scales on Maps

The scale on the map of a city is inch equals 2 miles. On the map, the width of the city at its widest point is inches. The city hosts a bicycle race across town at its widest point. Tashawna bikes at 10 miles per hour. How long will it take her to complete the race?

Explore Every equals 2 miles. The

distance across the city at its widest point is

Page 29: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

Scales on Maps

Solve

Cross products

The distance across the city is 30 miles.

Plan Create a proportion relating the measurements to the scale to find the distance in miles. Then use the formula to find the time.

Divide each side by 0.25.

Page 30: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

Answer: 3 hours

Scales on Maps

Divide each side by 10.It would take Tashawna 3 hours to bike across town.

Examine To determine whether the answer is reasonable, reexamine the scale. If 0.25 inches = 2 miles, then 4 inches = 32 miles. The distance across the city is approximately 32 miles. At 10 miles per hour, the ride would take about 3 hours. The answer is reasonable.

Page 31: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

A. 3.75 hr

B. 1.25 hr

C. 5 hr

D. 2.5 hr

An historic train ride is planned between two landmarks on the Lewis and Clark Trail. The scale on a map that includes the two landmarks is 3 centimeters = 125 miles. The distance between the two landmarks on the map is 1.5 centimeters. If the train travels at an average rate of 50 miles per hour, how long will the trip between the landmarks take?

Page 32: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

Homework

Chapter 7-2• Pg 392

1 – 6, 8 – 11, 14 – 19,{28 – 36, (9th and 10th grade)}, 37 – 41, 60 – 64 evens, 71 – 76

Page 33: Similar Polygons Chapter 7-2

Forced Perspective