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Volumes of cones intuition

Use Cavalieri's Principle to establish that the formula for the volume of a cone is the same as the formula for the volume of a pyramid (1/3 * base area * height). Created by Sal Khan.

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  • leafers ultimate style avatar for user gui reens
    If I look at the two pictures, did Sal consider the correct "h" in the left picture, because "h" is not perpendicular to the base, whilst in the right picture "h" is perpendicular to the base?! In other words should Sal have drawn a perpendicular from the top onto the base of the left picture as "h"? I hope to receive a reply...thanks very much, gui

    p.s. One last remark I would like to make is that the way Sal drew the pictures, they can't have the same volume, because in the left picture "h" is not the perpendicular height with respect to its base!
    (7 votes)
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    • stelly blue style avatar for user Kim Seidel
      The 2 pictures are not the same shape. One is a pyramid and the other is a cone. The formulas used to find their surface area are different which is why a different approach is being taken.

      And, 2 different shapes can have the same area. A square that is 4 by 4 has area 16. A triangle with base 6.4 and height 5 also has area of 16.
      (6 votes)
  • blobby green style avatar for user Joel Nash
    Others have asked this question, but I haven't seen an explanation that I understand. The height of a pyramid is measured from the vertex/apex to the center of the base--not the length of one edge, right? In this video, the diagram shows height as being the length of one vertical edge of the pyramid. Shouldn't the height of both the cone and the pyramid be measured using the same method: Distance from the center of the base to the vertex/apex? Thank you for your help!
    (4 votes)
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    • mr pink green style avatar for user David Severin
      I have submitted a request in "Report a Problem." You are correct in that the height of a right pyramid should be measured from the base to the center of the base. We have to wait and see if anything happens, I will pass on any response, or one day you may see a correction box.
      (1 vote)
  • mr pink green style avatar for user 2045687
    What's the volume of a cone?
    (3 votes)
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  • blobby green style avatar for user mrbb554455
    Why the height of pyramid is not 90 degree perpendicular ?please help I don’t understand how the height of a pyramid can be not perpendicular side.
    (3 votes)
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  • aqualine ultimate style avatar for user Simum
    Why are the triangles similar?
    (2 votes)
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  • blobby green style avatar for user Matej Šarlija
    Not exactly seeing how x/2 follows from h/2?
    (1 vote)
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  • leaf blue style avatar for user Windows Shutdown
    This video really confused me alot. If anyone could help me, that would be helpful
    (0 votes)
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Video transcript

- [Instructor] So I have two different three-dimensional figures here. I have a pyramid here on the left, and I have a cone here on the right. And we know a few things about these two figures. First of all, they have the exact same height. So this length right over here is h, and this length right over here, going from the peak to the center of the base here, is h as well. We also know that the area of the bases is the same. So for example, in this left pyramid, the area of the base would be x times, and let's just assume that it is a square, so x times x. So the area here is going to be equal to x squared. And the area of the base, so that's area of this base is equal to x squared. And the area of this base right over here would be equal to area is equal to pi times r squared. And I'm saying that these two things are the same. So we also know that x squared is equal to pi r squared. Now, my question to you is do these two figures have the same volume, or is it different? And if they are different, which one has a larger volume? Pause this video, and try to think about that. All right, now let's do this together. Now, given that we're talking about two figures that have the same height and at least the area of the base is the same, you might be thinking that Cavalieri's principle might be useful. And just a reminder of what that is, Cavalieri's principle tells us that if you have two figures, and we're thinking in three dimension, three-dimensional version of Cavalieri's principle, if you have two figures that have the same height and at any point along that height the cross-sectional area is the same, then the figures have the same volume. So what we need to do is figure out is it true that at any point in this height do these figures have the same cross-sectional area? Well, to think about that, let's pick an arbitrary point along this height. And just for simplicity, let's pick halfway along the height, although we could do this analysis at any point along the height. So halfway along the height there. Halfway along the height there. So this distance right over here, that would be h over two. This distance right over here would be h over two. This whole thing is h. And what we can do is construct what look like similar triangles, and we can even prove it to ourselves that these are similar triangles. So let me construct them right over here. And the reason why we know they're similar is that this line is going to be parallel to this line and that this line is parallel to that line, to that radius. And how do we know that? Well, we're taking cross-sectional areas that are parallel to the base, that are parallel to the surface on which it sits in this situation. So in either case, these cross-sections are going to be parallel. So these lines, which sit in these cross-sections or sit on the base and sit in the cross-section, have to be parallel as well. Well, because these are parallel lines, this angle is congruent to that angle. This angle is congruent to this angle. 'Cause these are transversals across parallel lines, and these are just corresponding angles. And of course, they share this angle in common. And here, you see very clearly right angle, right angle. This angle is congruent to that angle, and then both triangles share that. And so this smaller triangle in either case is similar to the larger triangle. And what that helps us realize is that the ratio between corresponding sides is going to be the same. So if this side is h over two and the entire height is h, so this is half of the entire height, that tells us that this side is going to be half of r. So this right over here is going to be r over two. And this side over here, by the same argument, is going to be x over two. And so what's the cross-sectional area here? Well, it's going to be x over two squared. So it's going to be x over two squared, which is equal to x squared over four, which is 1/4 of the base's area, which is equal to 1/4 of the base's area. And what about over here? Well, this cross-sectional area is going to be pi times r over two squared, which is the same thing as pi r squared over four, or we could say that is 1/4 pi r squared, which is the same thing as 1/4 of the area of the base. The area of the base is pi r squared. Now we're saying 1/4 pi r squared. So this is going to be equal to 1/4 the area. And we already said that these areas are the same, and so we've just seen that the cross-sectional area at that point of the height of both of these figures is the same. And you could do that 1/4 along the height, 3/4 along the height. You're going to get the same exact analysis. You're gonna have two similar triangles, and you're going to see that you have the same areas, same cross-sectional areas at that point of the height. And so therefore, we see by Cavalieri's principle in three dimensions that these two figures have the same volume. And what's interesting about that is it allows us to take the formula, which we've proven and gotten the intuition for in other videos, for the volume of a pyramid. We've learned that the volume of a pyramid is equal to 1/3 times base times height. And say, well, this one must have the exact same volume. It must also be volume is equal to 1/3 times the area of the base times the height. Because in both of these cases, the area of the base is the same, and the height is the same. And we know that they have the same volume.