Lesson 18More Relationships

Learning Goal

Let’s use graphs and equations to show relationships involving area, volume, and exponents.

Learning Targets

  • I can create tables and graphs that show different kinds of relationships between amounts.

  • I can write equations that describe relationships with area and volume.

Lesson Terms

  • coordinate plane
  • dependent variable
  • independent variable

Warm Up: Which One Doesn’t Belong: Graphs

Problem 1

Which one doesn’t belong?

  1. Coordinate plane, nine points are graphed and the trend of the data points move linearly upward and to the right, where the first point begins at the origin.
  2. Coordinate plane, 11 points are graphed and the trend of the data points move linearly downward and to the right, where the first point begins on the vertical axis, high above the origin.
  3. Coordinate plane, 1 points are graphed and the trend of the data points move in a curve that moves upward and to the right, where the first point begins on the vertical axis, slightly above the origin.
  4. Coordinate plane, 11 points are graphed and the trend of the data points move horizontally and to the right, where the first point begins on the vertical axis and slightly above the origin.

Activity 1: Making a Banner

Problem 1

Mai is creating a rectangular banner to advertise the school play. The material for the banner is sold by the square foot. Mai has enough money to buy 36 square feet of material. She is trying to decide on the length and width of the banner.

  1. If the length is 6 feet, what is the width?

  2. If the length is 4 feet, what is the width?

  3. If the length is 9 feet, what is the width?

  4. To find different combinations of length and width that give an area of 36 square feet, Mai uses the equation , where is the width and is the length. Compare your strategy and Mai’s method for finding the width. How were they alike or different?

  5. Use several combinations of length and width to create a graph that shows the relationship between the side lengths of various rectangles with area 36 square feet.

  6. Explain how the graph describes the relationship between length and width for different rectangles with area 36.

  7. Suppose Mai used the equation to find the length for different values of the width. Would the graph be different if she graphed length on the vertical axis and width on the horizontal axis? Explain how you know.

Print Version

Mai is creating a rectangular banner to advertise the school play. The material for the banner is sold by the square foot. Mai has enough money to buy 36 square feet of material. She is trying to decide on the length and width of the banner.

  1. If the length is 6 feet, what is the width?

  2. If the length is 4 feet, what is the width?

  3. If the length is 9 feet, what is the width?

  4. To find different combinations of length and width that give an area of 36 square feet, Mai uses the equation , where is the width and is the length. Compare your strategy and Mai’s method for finding the width. How were they alike or different?

  5. Use several combinations of length and width to create a graph that shows the relationship between the side lengths of various rectangles with area 36 square feet.

    A blank coordinate plane with the origin labeled "O". The horizontal axis is labeled "length", and the vertical axis is labeled "width". For both axes, the numbers 0 through 38, in increments of 2, are indicated.
  6. Explain how the graph describes the relationship between length and width for different rectangles with area 36.

  7. Suppose Mai used the equation to find the length for different values of the width. Would the graph be different if she graphed length on the vertical axis and width on the horizontal axis? Explain how you know.

Activity 2: Cereal Boxes

Problem 1

A cereal manufacturer needs to design a cereal box that has a volume of 225 cubic inches and a height that is no more than 15 inches.

  1. The designers know that the volume of a rectangular prism can be calculated by multiplying the area of its base and its height. Complete the table with pairs of values that will make the volume 225 in.

    height (in)

    area of base

  2. Describe how you found the missing values for the table.

  3. Write an equation that shows how the area of the base, , is affected by changes in the height, , for different rectangular prisms with volume 225 in³.

  4. Plot the ordered pairs from the table on the graph to show the relationship between the area of the base and the height for different boxes with volume 225 in³.

Print Version

A cereal manufacturer needs to design a cereal box that has a volume of 225 cubic inches and a height that is no more than 15 inches.

  1. The designers know that the volume of a rectangular prism can be calculated by multiplying the area of its base and its height. Complete the table with pairs of values that will make the volume 225 in.

    height (in)

    area of base

  2. Describe how you found the missing values for the table.

  3. Write an equation that shows how the area of the base, , is affected by changes in the height, , for different rectangular prisms with volume 225 in³.

  4. Plot the ordered pairs from the table on the graph to show the relationship between the area of the base and the height for different boxes with volume 225 in³.

    A blank coordinate plane with the origin labeled "O". The horizontal axis is labeled "height", and the numbers 0 through 15 are indicated. The vertical axis is labeled "area of base", and the numbers 0 through 80, in increments of 5, are indicated.

Activity 3: Multiplying Mosquitoes

Problem 1

A researcher who is studying mosquito populations collects the following data:

day in the study (d)

number of mosquitoes (n)

  1. The researcher said that, for these five days, the number of mosquitoes, , can be found with the equation where is the day in the study. Explain why this equation matches the data.

  2. Use the ordered pairs in the table to graph the relationship between number of mosquitoes and day in the study for these five days.

  3. Describe the graph. Compare how the data, equation, and graph illustrate the relationship between the day in the study and the number of mosquitoes.

  4. If the pattern continues, how many mosquitoes will there be on day 6?

Print Version

A researcher who is studying mosquito populations collects the following data:

day in the study (d)

number of mosquitoes (n)

  1. The researcher said that, for these five days, the number of mosquitoes, , can be found with the equation where is the day in the study. Explain why this equation matches the data.

  2. Use the ordered pairs in the table to graph the relationship between number of mosquitoes and day in the study for these five days.

    A blank coordinate plane with the origin labeled "O". The horizontal axis is labeled "day of the study" and the numbers 0 through 6 are indicated. The vertical axis is labeled "number of mosquitos" and the numbers 0 through 40, in increments of 5, are indicated.
  3. Describe the graph. Compare how the data, equation, and graph illustrate the relationship between the day in the study and the number of mosquitoes.

  4. If the pattern continues, how many mosquitoes will there be on day 6?

Lesson Summary

Equations can represent relationships between geometric quantities. For instance:

  • If is the side length of a square, then the area is related to :

  • Sometimes the relationships are more specific. For example, the perimeter of a rectangle with length and width is . If we consider only rectangles with a length of 10, then the relationship between the perimeter and the width is:

Here is another example of an equation with an exponent expressing the relationship between quantities:

  • A super ball is dropped from 10 feet. On each successive bounce, it only goes as high as on the previous bounce.

    This means that on the first bounce, the ball will bounce 5 feet high, and then on the second bounce it will only go feet high, and so on. We can represent this situation with an equation to find how high the super ball will bounce after any number of bounces.

    To find how high the super ball bounces on the bounce, we have to multiply 10 feet (the intial height) by and multiply by again for each bounce thereafter; we need to do this times. So the height, , of the ball on the bounce will be In this equation, the dependent variable, , is affected by changes in the independent variable, .

Equations and graphs can give us insight into different kinds of relationships between quantities and help us answer questions and solve problems.