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| Question 499276:  A cylindrical tin of height h cm and radius r cm, has a surface area, including its top and bottom, A cm^2.
 i) Write down an expression a A in terms of r, h and pi.
 I got this to be A = 2pi r h + 2pi r^2
 ii) A tin of height 6cm has surface area 54picm^2. What is the radius of the tin?
 I'm not sure how to work this part out.
 iii) Another tin has the same diameter as height. Its surface area is 150picm^2. What is its radius?
 I'd really appreciate your help.
 h = 6
 
 Answer by Theo(13342)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! question 1: height = h
 radius = r
 surface area = the area of the sides of the can plus the area of top and bottom of the can.
 area of the top and bottom of the can is equal to 2*(pi*r^2)
 area of the side of the can is equal to h*(2*pi*r)
 S = surface area of the can.
 S = 2*pi*r^2 + 2*pi*r*h
 
 question 2:
 you are given that S = 54*pi square centimeters.
 you are given that h = 6 centimeters.
 you want to find the radius.
 the formula used is the same formula you just derived in question number 1.
 that formula is:
 S = 2*pi*r^2 + 2*pi*r*h
 you know h, so substitute for h in the equation to get:
 S = 2*pi*r^2 + 2*pi*r*6
 simplify to get:
 S = 2*pi*r^2 + 12*pi*r
 you know the value of S, so substitute for S in the equation to get:
 54*pi = 2*pi*r^2 + 12*pi*r
 divide both sides of the equation by pi to get:
 54 = 2*r^2 + 12*r
 subtract 54 from both sides of the equation to get:
 2r^2 + 12r - 54 = 0
 divide both sides of the equation by 2 to get:
 r^2 + 6r - 27 = 0
 this is a quadratic equation in standard form.
 factor this equation to get:
 (r + 9) * (r - 3) = 0
 this equation is true if (r+9) = 0 or if (r-3) = 0 or if both are 0.
 solve for r+9 = 0 to get r = -9
 solve for r-3 = 0 to get r = 3
 r can't be negative so your answer has to be r = 3.
 let's see if that's true.
 your original equation is:
 S = 54*pi
 the formula is:
 S = 2*pi*r^2 + 2*pi*r*h
 you now know that:
 h = 6
 r = 3
 the formula becomes:
 S = 2*pi*3^2 + 2*pi*3*6
 simplify to get:
 S = 2*pi*9 + 2*pi*18
 simplify further to get:
 S = 18*pi + 36*pi
 simplify further to get:
 S = 54*pi
 the value of 3 for r is good.
 your answer is:
 r = 3 cm
 
 question 3:
 you are given that S = 150*pi square centimeters
 same formula is used again.
 formula is:
 S = 2*pi*r^2 + 2*pi*r*h
 h = height
 r = radius
 S = surface area
 d = diameter
 you are given that the diameter is equal to the height.
 you get:
 d = h
 diameter is equal to twice the radius.
 this leads to:
 d = 2r
 since h = d, this leads to:
 h = 2r
 we can substitute for h in the equation by replacing h with 2r to get:
 S = 2*pi*r^2 + 2*pi*r*h becomes:
 S = 2*pi*r^2 + 2*pi*r*2r
 simplify this to get:
 S = 2*pi*r^2 + 4*pi*r^2
 these are now like terms so we can combine them to get:
 S = 6*pi*r^2
 we are given that S = 150 square cm.
 we replace S with 150 to get:
 150 = 6*pi*r^2
 divide both sides of the equation by 6 to get:
 25 = pi*r^2
 divide both sides of the equation by pi to get:
 25/pi = r^2
 take the square root of both sides of the equation to get:
 r = +/- sqrt(25/pi)
 we can simplify this a little further to get:
 r = +/- 5/sqrt(pi)
 since r can't be negative, this then becomes:
 r = 5/sqrt(pi)
 to confirm this is a good number we start over with the additional information that r = 5/sqrt(pi)
 our formula is, once again:
 S = 2*pi*r^2 + 2*pi*r*h
 we replace h with 2r to get:
 S = 2*pi*r^2 + 2*pi*r*2r
 we combine like terms to get:
 S = 2*pi*r^2 + 4*pi*r^2
 we know that r^2 = 25/pi, so we can replace r^2 with that to get:
 S = 2*pi*25/pi + 4*pi*25/pi
 the pies in the numerator and denominator cancel out and we have:
 S = 2*25 + 4*25 which becomes S = 50 + 100 which becomes S = 150
 That's the number we are looking for, so the value of r = 5/sqrt(pi) is good.
 
 
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