A paragraph on circles and cylinders

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    Circles Cylinders
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Circles and cylinders are fundamentally related through the concept of circular cylinders, where a circle serves as the generating curve. A circular cylinder is formed by moving a circle along a straight line perpendicular to its plane, which highlights the geometric connection between the two shapes. Key mathematical relationships include the area of a circle (πr²) and the volume of a cylinder (πr²h), as well as the circumference of a circle and the surface area of a cylinder. The discussion also touches on the infinite number of circles that can be constructed within a cylinder. Understanding these relationships can enhance the explanation of how circles and cylinders are interconnected.
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Homework Statement



My niece has to write a paragraph on circles and cylinders. This is the exact question: "How are circles and cylinders related? Write a paragraph to explain what you learned about circles and cylinders."


Homework Equations




The Attempt at a Solution



I am thinking about comparing
a) the area of a circle and volume of a cylinder
b) the circumference of a circle and surface area of a cylinder

Any ideas about what else can be included in the paragraph? Thanks in advance.
 
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Their relationship to pi?
 
QuarkCharmer said:
Their relationship to pi?

Anything else?
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Well a circle has pi(r)^2, but the cylinder has a height measurement because it holds volume while a circle is 2d.
 
Unless we're talking about circular cylinders, I'm not sure that I see any relationship at all. For example, the graph of y = x2 in three-dimensional space is one type of cylinder (parabolic) that has a sort of trough shape.

If we limit the discussion to circular cylinders, a circle is the generating curve of this type of cylinder in which a right circular cylinder is obtained by moving a circle along a straight line path perpendicular to the plane of the circle.
 
Mark44 said:
Unless we're talking about circular cylinders, I'm not sure that I see any relationship at all. For example, the graph of y = x2 in three-dimensional space is one type of cylinder (parabolic) that has a sort of trough shape.
We are talking about circular cylinders.


Mark44 said:
If we limit the discussion to circular cylinders, a circle is the generating curve of this type of cylinder in which a right circular cylinder is obtained by moving a circle along a straight line path perpendicular to the plane of the circle.
Already mentioned that. But thanks anyway.
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You could define or state a construction of a cylinder starting from a circle. What about the inverse of that? You may have at some time been supplied with some high-falutin waffle that you are now required to bring up, it might well include the phrase 'the set of'.
 
epenguin said:
You could define or state a construction of a cylinder starting from a circle. What about the inverse of that? You may have at some time been supplied with some high-falutin waffle that you are now required to bring up, it might well include the phrase 'the set of'.
I didn't understand what you meant. :confused:
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Never mind the last sentence. Starting from a circle surely she can give a definition and a construction of a cylinder?

Then maybe an elementary calculation or two. For instance from the area of the circle deduce the volume of a finite cylinder? The surface area of the cylinder? (General formulae in terms of radius r and height h.) Given a cylinder how many circles can you construct? (an infinite number).
 
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