QUESTION IMAGE
Question
- takeshi made some mistakes when calculating the surface area of the triangular prism shown. describe takeshi’s mistakes and correct them.
ns 3–5: here is a polyhedron and th the name of this type...
To solve this, we analyze the triangular prism's surface area components: two triangular bases and three rectangular faces.
Step 1: Identify Mistakes
- Triangular Bases: The triangle has base \( b = 4 \), height \( h = 3 \). Area of one triangle is \( \frac{1}{2} \times 4 \times 3 = 6 \), so two triangles should be \( 2 \times 6 = 12 \). Takashi likely miscalculated (e.g., used wrong dimensions or formula).
- Rectangular Faces:
- Face with “16”: Dimensions should be \( 4 \times 4 \)? No—prism length is \( 4 \) (from triangle’s height? Wait, no: the prism’s length (the distance between the two triangles) is \( 4 \)? Wait, the rectangles:
- First rectangle (label “20”): \( 5 \times 4 \)? Wait, no—wait, the triangular prism’s rectangles: the three rectangles have lengths equal to the prism’s length (let’s say \( l = 4 \)) and widths equal to the triangle’s sides (\( 3, 4, 5 \))? Wait, no, the net shows:
- Triangle sides: \( 3, 4, 5 \) (right triangle, \( 3^2 + 4^2 = 5^2 \)).
- Rectangles:
- One with “20”: \( 5 \times 4 \)? Wait, \( 5 \times 4 = 20 \), that’s correct (length \( 4 \), width \( 5 \)).
- One with “16”: \( 4 \times 4 \)? No—wait, the middle rectangle: the triangle’s base is \( 4 \), so the rectangle should be \( 4 \times 4 \)? Wait, no, the prism’s length (the distance between the two triangles) is \( 4 \). So the three rectangles:
- \( 3 \times 4 = 12 \) (correctly labeled “12” for one).
- \( 4 \times 4 = 16 \) (correct? Wait, the triangle’s base is \( 4 \), so the rectangle attached to the base \( 4 \) would be \( 4 \times 4 \), that’s correct.
- \( 5 \times 4 = 20 \) (correctly labeled “20”).
But the triangular bases: area of one triangle is \( \frac{1}{2} \times 3 \times 4 = 6 \), so two triangles should be \( 2 \times 6 = 12 \). If Takashi labeled a triangle as “12” (one triangle), that’s wrong—he should have two triangles (total \( 12 \)) or miscalculated the triangle’s area.
Step 2: Correct Calculation
- Triangular Bases:
Area of one right triangle: \( \frac{1}{2} \times \text{base} \times \text{height} = \frac{1}{2} \times 4 \times 3 = 6 \).
Two triangles: \( 2 \times 6 = 12 \).
- Rectangular Faces:
- Rectangle 1 (side \( 3 \)): \( 3 \times 4 = 12 \).
- Rectangle 2 (side \( 4 \)): \( 4 \times 4 = 16 \).
- Rectangle 3 (side \( 5 \)): \( 5 \times 4 = 20 \).
- Total Surface Area:
Sum all areas: \( 12 + 12 + 16 + 20 + 6 \)? Wait, no—wait, the net has two triangles and three rectangles. Wait, the net in the image: let’s count the faces. A triangular prism has 2 triangular faces and 3 rectangular faces. So:
- Two triangles: \( 2 \times 6 = 12 \).
- Three rectangles: \( 12 + 16 + 20 = 48 \).
- Total: \( 12 + 48 = 60 \).
Mistake Description
Takashi likely miscalculated the triangular faces (e.g., used \( \frac{1}{2} \times 4 \times 6 \) or counted one triangle as \( 12 \) instead of two triangles summing to \( 12 \)). Or, he misidentified the rectangular face dimensions (e.g., used wrong length/width for a rectangle).
Correct Solution
- Triangular Faces:
Area of one triangle: \( \frac{1}{2} \times 4 \times 3 = 6 \). Two triangles: \( 2 \times 6 = 12 \).
- Rectangular Faces:
- \( 3 \times 4 = 12 \), \( 4 \times 4 = 16 \), \( 5 \times 4 = 20 \). Sum: \( 12 + 16 + 20 = 48 \).
- Total Surface Area:
\( 12 + 48 = 60 \).
Snap & solve any problem in the app
Get step-by-step solutions on Sovi AI
Photo-based solutions with guided steps
Explore more problems and detailed explanations
Takashi’s mistake was likely in calculating the triangular faces (e.g., incorrect formula or dimensions) or mislabeling rectangular faces. The correct surface area is \( \boldsymbol{60} \) (units²).