IGCSE Shape Space
IGCSE Shape Space
IGCSE Shape Space
com
IGCSE
SHAPE &
SPACE
© Dr T J Price, 2011
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Obtuse angle: between 90° and 180°. Reflex angle: greater than 180°.
Parallel: two or more lines going in the same direction (with the same gradient).
Equilateral triangle: three equal angles Isosceles triangle: two equal angles
and three equal sides. and two equal sides.
Right-angled triangle: one angle of 90°. Scalene triangle: no special angles or sides.
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Interior angle: an angle Exterior angle: the angle the line turns
inside a corner of a polygon. through at each corner (the 'turtle' angle).
Angle of elevation: the angle above Angle of depression: the angle below
the horizontal. the horizontal.
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a + b + c = 180 a + b + c = 180
a
a b
b
c d c
a+b=c a + b + c + d = 360
If you walk around the shape once, You can divide an n-sided polygon
you turn through a total angle of 360°. into n – 2 triangles, each 'worth' 180°.
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a c
a
c
F
AA
v v
TJP TOP TIP: This is a V and a V IGCSE INSIDER INFO: You must use
(for Vertical), Opposite one another. the proper names: 'Z angle', 'F angle'
and 'X angle' will score zero marks.
V V
A Bearing is simply an angle measured clockwise from North. Bearings are often
used in navigation where a compass is used to find the direction of North.
The bearing of A from B means we are at B, going towards A.
The bearing of B from A is 180° different from the bearing of A from B.
N
072° A
252° = 72 + 180
B
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A
C
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A B
Regular Hexagon:
Set your compasses to the required side length.
Draw a circle centre O.
Use the compasses to mark off the side length all around the circumference.
Join the marks to construct the hexagon ABCDEF.
C B
D O A
E F
Square:
Given a baseline AB, construct a perpendicular line at A (see previous page).
Use your compasses to mark off the distance AB up this line to give C.
Using this same radius, now draw arcs centred on C and B, crossing at D.
C D
A B
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DIAM
E TER
RA
DIU
S
TANG
EN T
Just t
ouche
s the CIRCUMFERENCE
circle
Radius < Diameter < Circumference, just like the length of the words...
CHOR Th
M ME
SE rry's e..
D ink o
IN N oco
Think
G
OR T
gu itar st Te ran
rings..
.
ch .
g
lat
e
MAJOR
SEGMENT
ARC
Like an arch... MINOR
SECTOR
MAJOR
SECTOR
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O O
θ
θ
θ θ
O θ
2θ
θ
O
Φ
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C
θ
A
B
D
B B
D
A A
C C
IGCSE INSIDER INFO: You have to give a reason for each step when finding the
unknown angles in a question. Use the official names above, not 'Star Trek', etc.
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START
Is it a RAT NO
(Right-Angled Triangle)?
YES
YES YES
Use PYTHAGORAS Use SOHCAHTOA Use SINE RULE Use COSINE RULE
All these formulae (except for one) are given inside the front cover of your IGCSE paper.
ANATOMY OF A RAT
Learn these special names for the sides of a right-angled triangle.
E
OPPOSITE
N US
E
P OT
HY
θ
ADJACENT
The Hypotenuse is always opposite the right angle (Pythagoras and SOHCAHTOA)
and it is the longest side.
The Opposite is opposite the given angle (SOHCAHTOA).
The Adjacent is next to (adjacent to) the given angle (SOHCAHTOA).
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c
b
2 2 2
Use a b = c
where c 2 is the hypotenuse.
a
TJP TOP TIP: Go ahead and relabel the triangle if you like, to get c in the right place
on the hypotenuse. Just remember to change back to the correct letter at the end.
b
34
A: b 2302 = 342
2
b 900 = 1156
2
b = 1156−900 = 256
So b = 256 = 16 .
Q: Find the height of an equilateral triangle of side 5 m.
5m 5m
hm
A: Hint: split it into two RATs!
2 2 2
2.5 h = 5
6.25h2 = 25 2.5 m 2.5 m
2
h = 25−6.25 = 18.75
So h = 18.75 = 4.33 . The height is 4.33 m (3 sig figs).
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Opp
sin = E
OPPOSITE
Hyp N US
E
Adj P OT
cos = HY
Hyp
Opp θ
tan =
Adj
ADJACENT
Decide which SOHCAHTOA triangle to use by seeing which side does not feature
in the question (as either a number or an unknown letter).
Then cover up the letter you are trying to find; the remaining two letters give the
formula you need. For example, to find H in the SOH triangle, we get O ÷ S.
Two letters on the bottom line are multiplied; a letter on top is divided by one underneath.
27°
A: The Adjacent side does not feature in this question, so use SOH (no Adj).
We are finding the Opposite side, so from the SOH triangle, Opp = Sin × Hyp.
x = sin 27×11 = 4.99 (3 sig figs).
y
Q: Find the length y . 31°
A: The Hypotenuse does not feature in this question, so use TOA (no Hyp).
We are finding the Adjacent side, so from the TOA triangle, Adj = Opp ÷ Tan
y = 8÷tan 31 = 13.3 (3 sig figs).
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TJP TOP TIP: Always use the SHIFT button to find an angle.
This gives the inverse sin, cos or tan, written as sin −1 , cos−1 , tan−1 .
If you get error on your calculator, you have got your numbers the wrong way round.
θ°
49
A: The Opposite does not feature in this question, so use CAH (no Opp).
We are finding Cos, so from the CAH triangle, Cos = Adj ÷ Hyp
−1
= cos 49÷57 = 30.7 ° (1 dp).
THREE-DIMENSIONAL PROBLEMS
We may get a 3-D question which we have to break down into 2-D RATs in order to
find a mystery length or angle.
C
6
A 20 B
A 20 B
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a b c
TJP TOP TIP: OppoSite pair ⇨Sine Rule. = =
sin A sin B sin C
A: First, label the sides and angles with a , A and B (we don't need c and C here).
17 b
= a=17
sin 67 sin 35 b
17
×sin 35 = b B=35°
sin 67
A=67°
b = 10.6 (3 sig figs)
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TJP TOP TIP: Relabel the triangle so that the side you are finding is called a .
'Cos that's what is on the left hand side of the formula...
Q: Find side y .
y
2.6
35°
6.2
A: Relabel the triangle with a = y , and put angle A opposite it.
It doesn't matter where you put b and c , by the way...
2 2 2
a = 2.6 6.2 −2×2.6×6.2 cos 35
2
a=y
a = 6.7638.44−32.24 cos 35 b=2.6
a 2 = 18.79 A=35°
a = y = 4.33 (3 sig figs). c=6.2
b2c 2−a 2
IGCSE INSIDER INFO: LEARN THIS FORMULA! cos A =
2 bc
It's not given in the front of the exam paper.
Q: Find angle A.
a=12
b=4
2 2 2
4 13 −12
A: cos A = A°
2×4×13
41 c=13
cos A = = 0.39423
104
A = cos−1 0.39423 = 66.8 ° .
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TJP TOP TIP: Relabel the triangle so that the angle is called C, sandwiched
between sides a and b .
A: A sneaky question; we first have to fill in the missing angle at the top, which is
sandwiched between the two given sides.
This angle is 180 – 33 – 59 = 88°. a=66 cm C=88°
1 b=41 cm
A = 2
×66×41×sin 88
33° 59°
A = 1352.18
So the area is 1350 cm² (3 sig fig).
a=x
C=42°
b=2x
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Triangle
Perimeter = sum of the sides
Area = ½ base × vertical height
Rectangle
Perimeter = 2 × base + 2 × height
Area = base × height
Parallelogram
Perimeter = 2 × base + 2 × slope height
Area = base × vertical height
Trapezium
Perimeter = sum of the sides
Area = mean width × vertical height
Circle
Circumference = 2 π r
Area = π r²
TJP TOP TIP: Area is squarier!
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The surface area is the total area of the outside of a 3-D shape.
If you are asked for the curved surface area, just leave out any flat faces.
[The formulae you are given include only the curved surface area for cones/cylinders.]
Cuboid
Surface area = 2 abbcca c
Volume = abc
b
a
Prism
Surface area = sum of rectangles + 2 ends
Volume = area of end × length
r
Cylinder
Surface area = 2 r h2 r 2 h
Volume = r 2 h
Note: h may be the length if the
cylinder is lying on its side.
Cone
Surface area = r l r 2 l
1 2 h
Volume = 3 r h
Note: l , h , r obey l 2 = h 2r 2 where r
l is the slant height and h is the vertical height.
Sphere
Surface area = 4 r 2
4 3
Volume = 3 r
r
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If we enlarge a shape on a special 3-D photocopier, what happens to the lengths, the
areas and the volumes?
Here is a clue: set the enlargement to double all lengths, and then see what happens.
2 cm a cm
4 cm
10 cm
A: Use two matching numbers to get the scale factor = 10 ÷ 4 = 2.5.
Now use it to find a = 2 × 2.5 = 5 cm and b = 12.5 ÷ 2.5 = 5 cm.
Q: A cylinder is enlarged by scale factor 3. Find the new length, area and volume.
L = 7cm
A = 40cm²
V = 100cm³
A: New L = 7 × 3 = 21 cm
New A = 40 × 3² = 40 × 9 = 360 cm²
New V = 100 × 3³ = 100 × 27 = 2700 cm³
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10 mm = 1 cm 1000 ml = 1 litre
1000 mm = 1 metre 1 ml = 1 cm³
100 cm = 1 metre 1 litre = 1000 cm³
1000 m = 1 km
100 squares
100 squares
So the answer is 3×100² = 30,000 cm².
n
io
ill
m
1 million
1
Q: How many litres of fruit juice would it take to fill a swimming pool 10m by 50m by 3m?
A: The pool has a volume of 10 × 50 × 3 = 1500 m³.
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by drawing a diagram: a
Q: If a =
2
5 and b = −77 , find (i) 3 a (ii) ab (iii) the modulus of a .
A: (i) 3 a = 3 = (ii) ab = =
2 6 2 −7 −5
5 15 5 7 12
(iii) modulus of a = 2 252 = 29 = 5.39 (3 sig figs)
E F G H
b
I a J K L
A: (i)
AC = 2 a (ii)
HG = −a (iii)
KF = −ab (iv)
DI = −3 a−2 b
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TJP TOP TIP: Two vectors are parallel if one is a multiple of the other.
C
B
MN = −ab and
A: BC = −2 a2 b .
Therefore BC = 2 MN , so:
(i) BC is twice as long as MN ,
(ii) BC is parallel to MN .
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Page Topic
2-3 Angle and Polygon Words
4-5 Angle and Polygon Facts
6-7 Construction
8 Parts of Circles
9-10 Circle Theorems
11 Flowchart for Triangle Formulae
12 Pythagoras
13-14 Trigonometry (SOHCAHTOA)
14 3-D Problems
15 Sine Rule
16 Cosine Rule
17 Area of a Triangle
18 Perimeter and Area
19 Surface Area and Volume
20 Similarity and Enlargement
21 Metric Units
22-23 Vectors
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