Finding Total Surface Area of Pyramids
Finding total surface area of pyramids is a Grade 7 geometry skill in Big Ideas Math Advanced 2, Chapter 14: Surface Area and Volume. The total surface area equals the base area plus the sum of all triangular face areas. For a square pyramid with 6 cm sides and slant height 5 cm, the surface area is 36 plus 60 equals 96 square centimeters.
Key Concepts
To find the total surface area of a pyramid, decompose it into its component surfaces: the polygonal base and the triangular faces. The total surface area is the sum of the base area and the areas of all triangular faces.
$$\text{Surface Area} = \text{Base Area} + \sum \text{Areas of Triangular Faces}$$.
Common Questions
How do you find the total surface area of a pyramid?
Add the base area plus the areas of all triangular lateral faces. Calculate each triangular face area as one-half times base times slant height, then multiply by the number of faces.
What is the slant height of a pyramid?
The slant height is the distance from the apex of the pyramid to the middle of a base edge, measured along a lateral face. It is not the same as the vertical height of the pyramid.
How many lateral faces does a square pyramid have?
A square pyramid has 4 lateral triangular faces, one for each side of the square base.
What textbook covers total surface area of pyramids in Grade 7?
Big Ideas Math Advanced 2, Chapter 14: Surface Area and Volume covers methods for finding the total surface area of pyramids with various base shapes.