Posts Tagged ‘width’
Friday, November 13th, 2009
Introduction to Aspect Ratio
Description
A detailed tutorial on what aspect ratio is. Step by step tutorial including several examples of how to find the aspect ratio for reference.
Overview
The aspect ratio can only be used when referring to a shape, typically a square type of shape, such as a square, rhombus, rectangle, or parallelogram. The aspect ratio is used very often for describing measurements. It is the ratio of the longer dimension to the shorter dimension – that is, the length to the width. In a 3D shape, the depth – which is the second measurement of width – is added to the end of this measurement.
Tags: 2D, 3D, aspect, depth, Geometry, length, measure, measurement, parallelogram, ratio, rectangle, rhombus, shape, square, width
Posted in Geometry | No Comments »
Friday, September 25th, 2009
Using the Midpoint Rule to Solve Error Bounds
Description
A detailed tutorial on using the midpoint rule and solving error bounds. Step by step tutorial including examples of solving error bounds using the midpoint rule for reference.
Overview
The midpoint rule, also known as the rectangle method, is the easiest way of solving error bounds. The region under the graph of a function is sectioned off into rectangles of equal width. You then must find the areas of these rectangles. Then all the areas are added together to find the approximation of the integral. The formula for this is:
The least complicated form of the midpoint rule is expressed as:
Tags: addition, approximation, area, Calculus, definite integral, error bounds, formula, function, graph, Math, mid-ordinate rule, midpoint rule, rectangle, rectangle method, sum, width
Posted in Calculus | No Comments »
Tuesday, September 8th, 2009
How to Find the Volume of a Cube
Description
This is just a short video showing a visual display of the volue of a small cube, and a formula for that specific cube is expressed at the end. That formula can be used to derive the formulas for other cubes.
Overview
A cube is a common object – they are any 3D square object with sides all measuring equal length. This can expressed the same way as a cube, but is easier to solve.
V = l * w * h = s^3
The length, width, and height are all the same on a cube so you can simply “cube” the number, or put it the third power. This is also why we call putting things to the third power “cubing”.
Tags: area, cube, cubes, finding volume, Geometry, height, length, Math, side, square, volume, volume of a cube, width
Posted in Geometry | No Comments »
Tuesday, September 8th, 2009
How to Find the Volume of a Rectangular Prism
Description
This video explains what a rectangular prism is and then gives and explains the formula to find the volume of a rectangular prism. This video provides two sample problems with easy to understand steps and solutions.
Overview
A rectangular prism is really just a rectangle in 3D. The volume of a rectanglur prism can be expressed like this:
V = l * w * h
Where l is the length, w is the width, and h is the height. This differs from an area formula because in an area formula there is no height, only a length and width.
Tags: area, finding volume, Geometry, height, length, Math, prism, rectangle, rectangular prisms, volume, volume of a rectangular prism, width
Posted in Geometry | No Comments »