The surface area of a prism is the sum of the areas of all the faces.
To find the surface area of a prism, we need to determine the kinds of areas we need to add together.
Consider this cube:
The surface area of a prism is the sum of the areas of all the faces.
We can use a similar method for a cylinder. By "unwrapping" the cylinder we can treat the curved surface as a rectangle, with one side length equal to the height of the cylinder, and the other the perimeter (circumference) of the base circle. This is given by 2\pi r, where r is the radius.
This means the surface area of the curved part of a cylinder is 2\pi rh, where r is the radius and h is the height.
We can see how the cylinder unrolls to make this rectangle in the applet below:
The length of the rectangle that wraps around the cylinder is equal to the circumference of the face of the cylinder.
To find the surface area of the whole cylinder, we need to add the area of the top and bottom circles to the area of the curved part. Both of these circles have an area of \pi r^{2}, so the surface area of a cylinder is: \text{Surface area of a cylinder}=2\pi r^{2}+2\pi rh, where r is the radius and h is the height of the cylinder.
Consider the following cylinder.
Find the curved surface area of the cylinder to two decimal places.
Using the result from part (a) or otherwise, find the total surface area of the cylinder. Round your answer to two decimal places.
Find the surface area of the figure shown.