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Stretching Your Understanding. An Investigation Into Scaling. Wall. Guy. Wall. Shadow. Guy. Shadow. Guy. How many times taller is the shadow than the guy? Let’s call this number the scaling factor for height.
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Stretching Your Understanding An Investigation Into Scaling
Wall Guy
Wall Shadow Guy
Shadow Guy How many times taller is the shadow than the guy? Let’s call this number the scaling factor for height.
So it seems that the shadow is 3 times as tall as the guy. That is, the scaling factor for height between the guy and the shadow is 3. Often, we say that the guy’s height has been scaled up by a factor of 3.
Suppose we measure and determine that the guy is 2 meters tall and shadow is 6 meters tall. Shadow Guy
Suppose we measure and determine that the guy is 2 meters tall and shadow is 6 meters tall. Shadow 6m Guy 2m
Suppose we measure and determine that the guy is 2 meters tall and shadow is 6 meters tall. Shadow 6m Guy 2m How might we determine the scaling factor mathematically?
shadow’s height guy’s height So, the scaling factor =
shadow’s height guy’s height So, the scaling factor = =
shadow’s height guy’s height 6m 2m So, the scaling factor = =
shadow’s height guy’s height 6m 2m So, the scaling factor = = = 3
What about the width scaling factor? Shadow Guy
What about the width scaling factor? Shadow Guy
Height and width scaled equally Unscaled Height scaled more than width Width scaled more than height
Similar Figures Height and width scaled equally Unscaled Height scaled more than width Width scaled more than height
Not Similar Figures Height and width scaled equally Unscaled Height scaled more than width Width scaled more than height
What to remember: How to calculate the scaling factor: Dimension of Big Object Scaling factor = Dimension of Small Object What similarity means in this context: All dimensions are scaled by the same factor
What you will do: Part I: Find the scaling factors of the toy car for each dimension (height, length, and width)
What you will do: Part I: Find the scaling factors of the toy car for each dimension (height, length, and width) Part II a: Find the area of the parking space in which the toy car would park as well as that of the real car. Find the scaling factor for area. Using string and tape, mark out this area on the floor.
What you will do: Part II b: Make a box for your toy car by constructing a net using the graph paper provided. Find the scaling factor for volume.
Remember Similarity? Similar or not?
Remember Similarity? Similar or not?
Remember Similarity? Similar or not?
Remember Similarity? Similar or not?
Remember Similarity? Similar or not?
Remember Similarity? We call this self-similarity.