A solid is a term used when talking about a three-dimensional object.
By slicing through a solid, we produce a two-dimensional shape called a cross section. The figure created from a cross section depends on the orientation or angle of the intersecting plane.
A solid may form many different shapes by taking different cross sections. In particular, knowing a cross section of a solid isn't enough information to uniquely determine the original solid. Many different solids can produce identical cross sections.
Cross sections are formed when taking a slice of a figure horizontally, vertically, or diagonally. The shapes that form from cross sections may be more or less obvious, like when we take a vertical slice of a cube versus a diagonal slice.
Find a cross section parallel to the base and identify the shape formed by the cross section.
Consider the following cross section sliced from a solid figure:
Draw two different figures that the cross section could have come from.
Consider the cylinder shown below:
Identify three differently shaped cross sections, including at least one that comes from a diagonal slice.
A 3D printer uses computer assistance to stack layers of material that make a three-dimensional shape. The printer creates an object out of several layers to create a physical model of a computer image. Shown below are the layers of a model that a 3D printer has created. What solid figure is created by the printer?
A single three-dimensional solid may have cross sections of different shapes, depending on how the solid is sliced (vertical, horizontal or diagonal).