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1.19: Area of Polygons and Circles

  • Page ID
    56858
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    You may use a calculator for most of this module as needed.

    Area-51-sign-300x199.jpg

    We have seen that the perimeter of a polygon is the distance around the outside. Perimeter is a length, which is one-dimensional, and so it is measured in linear units (feet, centimeters, miles, etc.). The area of a polygon is the amount of two-dimensional space inside the polygon, and it is measured in square units: square feet, square centimeters, square miles, etc.

    You can always think of area as the number of squares required to completely fill in the shape.

    Exercises \(\PageIndex{1}\)

    1. Find the area of this rectangle.

    Area-explanation-5-by-4.png

    2. Find the area of this square.

    Area-explanation-4-by-4.png

    Answer

    1. \(20\text{ cm}^2\)

    2. \(16\text{ cm}^2\)

    Rectangles and Squares

    There are of course formulas for finding the areas of rectangles and squares; we don’t have to count little squares.

    Area of a Rectangle

    \(A=lw\)[1] or \(A=bh\)

    Area of a Square

    \[A=s^2 \nonumber \]

    Exercises \(\PageIndex{1}\)

    Find the area of each figure.

    3. Rectangle-8.png

    4. Square-8.png

    Answer

    3. \(4.86\text{ m}^2\)

    4. \(12.25\text{ ft}^2\)

    Parallelograms

    Another common polygon is the parallelogram, which looks like a tilted rectangle. As the name implies, the pairs of opposite sides are parallel and have the same length. Notice that, if we label one side as a base of the parallelogram, we have a perpendicular height which is not the length of the other sides.

    Parallelogram-definition.png

    The following set of diagrams shows that we can cut off part of a parallelogram and rearrange the pieces into a rectangle with the same base and height as the original parallelogram. A parallelogram with a base of \(7\) units and a vertical height of \(6\) units is transformed into a \(7\) by \(6\) rectangle, with an area of \(42\) square units.

    Parallelogram-explanation-1-2-3.png

    Therefore, the formula for the area of a parallelogram is identical to the formula for the area of a rectangle, provided that we are careful to use the base and the height, which must be perpendicular.

    Area of a Parallelogram

    \(A=bh\)

    Exercises \(\PageIndex{1}\)

    Find the area of each parallelogram.

    5. Parallelogram-2.png

    6. Parallelogram-1.png

    Answer

    5. \(120\text{ in}^2\)

    6. \(360\text{ m}^2\)

    Triangles

    When we need to find the area of a triangle, we need to identify a base and a height that is perpendicular to that base. If the triangle is obtuse, you may have to imagine the height outside of the triangle and extend the base line to meet it.

    Triangle-definition.png

    As shown below, any triangle can be doubled to form a parallelogram. Therefore, the area of a triangle is one half the area of a parallelogram with the same base and height.

    Triangle-explanation-1-2-3.png

    Area of a Triangle

    \(A=\dfrac{1}{2}bh\) or \(A=bh\div2\)

    As with a parallelogram, remember that the height must be perpendicular to the base.

    Exercises \(\PageIndex{1}\)

    Find the area of each triangle.

    7. Triangle-28by15.png

    8. Triangle-21by12.png

    9. Triangle-11by7.png

    10. Triangle-rotated-7-24-25-and-10-24-26.png

    Answer

    7. \(210\text{ ft}^2\)

    8. \(126\text{ cm}^2\)

    9. \(38.5\text{ cm}^2\)

    10. \(204\text{ ft}^2\)

    Trapezoids

    A somewhat less common quadrilateral is the trapezoid, which has exactly one pair of parallel sides, which we call the bases. The first example shown below is called an isosceles trapezoid because, like an isosceles triangle, its two nonparallel sides have equal lengths.

    Trapezoid-definition.png

    There are a number of ways to show where the area formula comes from, but the explanations are better in video because they can be animated.[2][3][4]

    Area of a Trapezoid

    \[A=\dfrac{1}{2}h(b_1+b_2) \nonumber \]

    or

    \[A=(b_1+b_2)h\div2 \nonumber \]

    Don’t be intimidated by the subscripts on \(b_1\) and \(b_2\); it’s just a way to name two different measurements using the same letter for the variable. (Many people call the bases \(a\) and \(b\) instead; feel free to write it whichever way you prefer.) Whatever you call them, you just add the two bases, multiply by the height, and take half of that.

    Exercises \(\PageIndex{1}\)

    Find the area of each trapezoid.

    11. Trapezoid-1.png

    12. Trapezoid-3.png

    13. Trapezoid-2.png

    Answer

    11. \(36\text{ m}^2\)

    12. \(124\text{ cm}^2\)

    13. \(288\text{ cm}^2\)


    Circles

    The area of a circle is \(\pi\) times the square of the radius: \(A=\pi{r^2}\). The units are still square units, even though a circle is round. (Think of the squares on a round waffle.) Because we can’t fit a whole number of squares—or an exact fraction of squares—inside the circle, the area of a circle will be an approximation.

    a circular waffle with a square grid pattern

    Area of a Circle

    \[A=\pi{r^2}\)]

    Remember that \(\pi\approx3.1416\).

    Exercises \(\PageIndex{1}\)

    Find the area of each circle. Round to the nearest tenth or to three significant figures, whichever seems appropriate.

    14. a circle with radius labeled 3 cm

    15. a circle with radius labeled 4 cm

    16. a circle with diameter labeled 14 in

    17. a circle with diameter labeled 9 in

    Each figure is a fraction of a circle. Calculate each area.

    18. The radius of the quarter circle is \(5\) meters.

    Circle-Quarter.png

    19. A quarter circle has been removed from a circle with a diameter of \(7\) feet.

    Circle-Pac-Man-150x150.png

    Answer

    14. \(28.3\text{ cm}^2\)

    15. \(50.3\text{ cm}^2\)

    16. \(153.9\text{ in}^2\)

    17. \(63.6\text{ in}^2\)

    18. \(19.6\text{ m}^2\)

    19. \(28.9\text{ ft}^2\)


    1. You might choose to use capital letters for the variables here because a lowercase letter "l" can easily be mistaken for a number "1".
    2. https://youtu.be/yTnYRpcZA9c
    3. https://youtu.be/WZtO3oERges
    4. https://youtu.be/uLHc6Br2veg

    This page titled 1.19: Area of Polygons and Circles is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Morgan Chase (OpenOregon) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform; a detailed edit history is available upon request.