Using Linear, Square, and Cubic Measure Appropriately
Learning Outcomes
- Understand the difference between linear, square, and cubic measure
When you want to know how much tile is needed to cover a floor, or the size of a wall to be painted, you need to know the area, a measure of the region needed to cover a surface. Area is measured is square units. We often use square inches, square feet, square centimeters, or square miles to measure area. A square centimeter is a square that is one centimeter (cm) on each side. A square inch is a square that is one inch on each side (see below).
Square measures have sides that are each [latex]1[/latex] unit in length.
The next image shows a rectangular rug that is [latex]2[/latex] feet long by [latex]3[/latex] feet wide. Each square is [latex]1[/latex] foot wide by [latex]1[/latex] foot long, or [latex]1[/latex] square foot. The rug is made of [latex]6[/latex] squares. The area of the rug is [latex]6[/latex] square feet.
The rug contains six squares of [latex]1[/latex] square foot each, so the total area of the rug is [latex]6[/latex] square feet.
When you measure how much it takes to fill a container, such as the amount of gasoline that can fit in a tank, or the amount of medicine in a syringe, you are measuring volume. Volume is measured in cubic units such as cubic inches or cubic centimeters. When measuring the volume of a rectangular solid, you measure how many cubes fill the container. We often use cubic centimeters, cubic inches, and cubic feet. A cubic centimeter is a cube that measures one centimeter on each side, while a cubic inch is a cube that measures one inch on each side (see below).
Cubic measures have sides that are [latex]1[/latex] unit in length.
Suppose the cube in the image below measures [latex]3[/latex] inches on each side and is cut on the lines shown. How many little cubes does it contain? If we were to take the big cube apart, we would find [latex]27[/latex] little cubes, with each one measuring one inch on all sides. So each little cube has a volume of [latex]1[/latex] cubic inch, and the volume of the big cube is [latex]27[/latex] cubic inches.
A cube that measures [latex]3[/latex] inches on each side is made up of [latex]27[/latex] one-inch cubes, or [latex]27[/latex] cubic inches.
example
For each item, state whether you would use linear, square, or cubic measure: 1. amount of carpeting needed in a room 2. extension cord length 3. amount of sand in a sandbox 4. length of a curtain rod 5. amount of flour in a canister 6. size of the roof of a doghouse. Solution| 1. You are measuring how much surface the carpet covers, which is the area. | square measure |
| 2. You are measuring how long the extension cord is, which is the length. | linear measure |
| 3. You are measuring the volume of the sand. | cubic measure |
| 4. You are measuring the length of the curtain rod. | linear measure |
| 5. You are measuring the volume of the flour. | cubic measure |
| 6. You are measuring the area of the roof. | square measure |
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[ohm_question]146501[/ohm_question]Perimeter and Area
The perimeter is a measure of the distance around a figure. The area is a measure of the surface covered by a figure.[latex]\begin{array}{c}\text{Perimeter}=4\text{ inches}\\ \text{Area}=1\text{ square inch}\end{array}[/latex]
When the ant walks completely around the tile on its edge, it is tracing the perimeter of the tile. The area of the tile is [latex]1[/latex] square inch.
example
Each side of two square tiles is [latex]1[/latex] square inch. Two tiles are pushed side by side and shown together below. 1. What is the perimeter of the figure? 2. What is the area?
Answer:
Solution
1. The perimeter is the distance around the figure. The perimeter is [latex]6[/latex] inches.
2. The area is the surface covered by the figure. There are [latex]2[/latex] square inch tiles so the area is [latex]2[/latex] square inches.
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[ohm_question]146926[/ohm_question]Contribute!
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Licenses & Attributions
CC licensed content, Original
- Question ID 146926, 146501. Authored by: Lumen Learning. License: CC BY: Attribution.
CC licensed content, Shared previously
- Determine the Perimeter and Area of a Square on a Grid. Authored by: James Sousa (mathispower4u.com). License: CC BY: Attribution.
CC licensed content, Specific attribution
- Prealgebra. Provided by: OpenStax License: CC BY: Attribution. License terms: Download for free at http://cnx.org/contents/[email protected].