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    The cube and the circles question on unit 0 day 6

    Module 0 Day 6 Challenge Part 4
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    • M
      mirthfulostrich M0 M1 M2
      last edited by debbie

      Module 0 Week 2 Day 6 Challenge Part 2

      For the part when you talk about how the small cube times 3x3x3 is equal to the cube that is 27 units I understand however I don't understand why the ball with the diameter of 10 multiplies by 0.5x0.5x0.5 to get to the ball with the diameter of 5.

      debbieD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • debbieD
        debbie ADMIN M0★ M1 M5 @mirthfulostrich
        last edited by debbie

        @mirthfulostrich Hi, thanks for asking! Maybe let's try thinking backwards, and pretend that we are the little ball with diameter of length 5. From his perspective, he wants to get bigger...

        M0W2D6-ball-diameter-5-to-10-forum.png

        He would like to grow to be like a ball with diameter of \(10,\) which means he wants to double in all three dimensions:

        M0W2D6-ball-diameter-5-to-10-forum2.png

        From looking at this, his volume definitely doesn't double.... that would give a snowman. We don't want a snowman!

        M0W2D6-ball-diameter-5-to-10-forum3.png

        Another illustration of why his volume doesn't double. We don't want a caterpillar!

        M0W2D6-ball-diameter-5-to-10-forum5.png

        We want something like a ball, with twice the width, twice the length, and twice the height. In terms of balls, it would be like this:

        M0W2D6-ball-diameter-5-to-10-forum6.png

        The stack of balls has \( 2 \times 2 \times 2 = 8\) balls in it.

        Similarly, a large ball with twice the dimensions will have \(2 \times 2 \times 2 = 8\) times the volume of the ball with diameter \(5.\)

        M0W2D6-ball-diameter-5-to-10-forum7.png

        $$ \text{volume of large ball} = 2 \times 2 \times 2 \times \text{ volume of the small ball} $$

        Inverting this to solve for the volume of the small ball, we get

        $$ \text{volume of small ball} = \frac{1}{2 \times 2 \times 2} \times \text{ volume of the large ball} $$

        $$ \text{volume of small ball} = \frac{1}{2} \times \frac{1}{2} \times \frac{1}{2} \times \text{ volume of the large ball} $$
        $$ \boxed{\text{volume of small ball} = 0.5 \times 0.5 \times 0.5 \times \text{ volume of the large ball}} $$

        🙂

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