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14 Area of Planar Figures

Learning Objectives

  • Determine the area formulas for basic planar figures
  • Find area of polygons and circles
  • Find the area of irregular figures made up of polygons or circles.

 

Finding Area

The Area of a shape is the measurement of the space occupied by the shape.

 

Examples: Write the formula for the area of the shapes below.

image

image                  image                     image                   image

image

                                  image                                     image

 

Note: Area is always measured in square units.

We can use the above formulas to find area of some basic shapes, as in the examples below.

Examples: Find the area of the basic figures below.

  1. Find the area of the trapezoid below.

image

Solution: Using the area formula for a trapezoid…. image

 

2. Find the area of a circular plot of land with diameter 240 meters.

Solution: image

 

To find the area of more irregular figures, it is often necessary to break up the shape into sub-shapes and find the area of each shape in the deconstruction. This is done in the examples below.

Example: Find the area of the irregular shape.

image

Solution: We can see that if we drop the right side of the upper portion straight down we get two rectangles as shown.

image

So, we have

A=60∙20=1200

for the left rectangle and

A=40∙30=1200

for the right rectangle. Thus, we have

1200+1200=2400

square units. Note that area is shown in square units.

This same strategy can be done for shapes involving circles as well!

Example: Find the area of the partial circle if the angle in the center is a right angle and the radius is 5 units.

image

Solution:

image

What basic shapes make up the “arrow” shape below?

Examples: Find the area of the figure. The height of the triangular portion is 2 units.

 

image

Solution:

image

If your shape is on a grid (that is, horizontal and vertical lines making up unit squares), then you can compute the area by counting how many full squares the shape covers. You can also use the grid to better break up or decompose the shape into simpler shapes.

Example: Assume the grid lines are one unit apart. Find the area.

image

image

 

Attributions
  • Content and structure adapted from RSCC Math 1410/1420 OER Team, 2022, CC BY 4.0.

License

Icon for the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License

Mathematics for Elementary Education II Copyright © by Natalie Hobson is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.