All PSAT Math Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : How To Find The Volume Of A Cone
What is the volume of a cone with a height of and base radius of ?
The fomula for the volume of a cone is
Because our radius of the base is , we know that .
.
Example Question #1 : How To Find The Surface Area Of A Cone
What is the surface area of a cone with a radius of 4 and a height of 3?
Here we simply need to remember the formula for the surface area of a cone and plug in our values for the radius and height.
Example Question #1 : How To Find The Surface Area Of A Cone
The lateral area is twice as big as the base area of a cone. If the height of the cone is 9, what is the entire surface area (base area plus lateral area)?
90π
27π
9π
81π
54π
81π
Lateral Area = LA = π(r)(l) where r = radius of the base and l = slant height
LA = 2B
π(r)(l) = 2π(r2)
rl = 2r2
l = 2r
From the diagram, we can see that r2 + h2 = l2. Since h = 9 and l = 2r, some substitution yields
r2 + 92 = (2r)2
r2 + 81 = 4r2
81 = 3r2
27 = r2
B = π(r2) = 27π
LA = 2B = 2(27π) = 54π
SA = B + LA = 81π
Example Question #1 : How To Find The Surface Area Of A Cone
A right cone has a radius of 4R and a height of 3R. What is the ratio of the total surface area of the cone to the surface area of just the base?
We need to find total surface area of the cone and the area of the base.
The area of the base of a cone is equal to the area of a circle. The formula for the area of a circle is given below:
, where r is the length of the radius.
In the case of this cone, the radius is equal to 4R, so we must replace r with 4R.
To find the total area of the cone, we need the area of the base and the lateral surface area of the cone. The lateral surface area (LA) of a cone is given by the following formula:
, where r is the radius and l is the slant height.
We know that r = 4R. What we need now is the slant height, which is the distance from the edge of the base of the cone to the tip.
In order to find the slant height, we need to construct a right triangle with the legs equal to the height and the radius of the cone. The slant height will be the hypotenuse of this triangle. We can use the Pythagorean Theorem to find an expression for l. According to the Pythagorean Theorem, the sum of the squares of the legs (which are 4R and 3R in this case) is equal to the square of the hypotenuse (which is the slant height). According to the Pythagorean Theorem, we can write the following equation:
Let's go back to the formula for the lateral surface area (LA).
To find the total surface area (TA), we must add the lateral area and the area of the base.
The problem requires us to find the ratio of the total surface area to the area of the base. This means we must find the following ratio:
We can cancel , which leaves us with 36/16.
Simplifying 36/16 gives 9/4.
The answer is 9/4.
Example Question #211 : Geometry
A cubic box has sides of length x. Another cubic box has sides of length 4x. How many of the boxes with length x could fit in one of the larger boxes with side length 4x?
16
40
64
4
80
64
The volume of a cubic box is given by (side length)3. Thus, the volume of the larger box is (4x)3 = 64x3, while the volume of the smaller box is x3. Divide the volume of the larger box by that of the smaller box, (64x3)/(x3) = 64.
Example Question #1972 : Hspt Mathematics
I have a hollow cube with 3” sides suspended inside a larger cube of 9” sides. If I fill the larger cube with water and the hollow cube remains empty yet suspended inside, what volume of water was used to fill the larger cube?
702 in3
73 in3
72 in3
698 in3
216 in3
702 in3
Determine the volume of both cubes and then subtract the smaller from the larger. The large cube volume is 9” * 9” * 9” = 729 in3 and the small cube is 3” * 3” * 3” = 27 in3. The difference is 702 in3.
Example Question #3 : Cubes
A cube weighs 5 pounds. How much will a different cube of the same material weigh if the sides are 3 times as long?
15 pounds
45 pounds
135 pounds
10 pounds
135 pounds
A cube that has three times as long sides is 3x3x3=27 times bigger than the original. Therefore, the answer is 5x27= 135.
Example Question #1 : Cubes
If the volume of a cube is 50 cubic feet, what is the volume when the sides double in length?
500 cu ft
300 cu ft
100 cu ft
400 cu ft
200 cu ft
400 cu ft
Using S as the side length in the original cube, the original is s*s*s. Doubling one side and tripling the other gives 2s*2s*2s for a new volume formula for 8s*s*s, showing that the new volume is 8x greater than the original.
Example Question #2 : How To Find The Volume Of A Cube
A cube has 2 faces painted red and the remaining faces painted green. The total area of the green faces is 36 square inches. What is the volume of the cube in cubic inches?
8
64
16
27
54
27
Cubes have 6 faces. If 2 are red, then 4 must be green. We are told that the total area of the green faces is 36 square inches, so we divide the total area of the green faces by the number of green faces (which is 4) to get the area of each green face: 36/4 = 9 square inches. Since each of the 6 faces of a cube have the same size, we know that each edge of the cube is √9 = 3 inches. Therefore the volume of the cube is 3 in x 3 in x 3 in = 27 cubic inches.
Example Question #1 : How To Find The Volume Of A Cube
If a waterproof box is 50cm in length, 20cm in depth, and 30cm in height, how much water will overflow if 35 liters of water are poured into the box?
15 liters
1 liters
30 lites
5 liters
No water will flow out of the box
5 liters
The volume of the box is 50 * 20 * 30 cm = 30,000 cm3.
1cm3 = 1mL, 30,000 cm3 = 30,000mL = 30 L.
Because the volume of the box is only 30 L, 5 L of the 35 L will not fit into the box.