A model is wrong only when it omits something the task requires.
Geometric Modeling | Lesson 2 of 2
Example 3: Water Bottle Capacity
Cylinder model: cm, cm; cap and neck excluded
— the bottle holds approximately half a liter.
Geometric Modeling | Lesson 2 of 2
Your Turn: A Larger Bottle
A similar bottle has cm and cm.
Calculate the volume in cm³, then convert to liters ().
Apply before advancing.
Geometric Modeling | Lesson 2 of 2
Answer: Larger Bottle Holds About 0.693 Liters
cm, cm:
— slightly more than the first bottle despite the shorter height.
Geometric Modeling | Lesson 2 of 2
Quick Check: How Much Did We Ignore?
The water bottle model excluded the cap and neck.
The cap is a small hemisphere; the neck is a narrow short cylinder.
Are these small enough to ignore — or does their omission make the model unacceptable?
Consider: what fraction of the total volume do they represent?
Geometric Modeling | Lesson 2 of 2
Answer: Small Features Can Often Be Ignored
Estimating capacity: cylinder model is adequate (error < 5%) ✓
Designing the bottle: composite model needed for precise dimensions ✗
Match the model's detail to the task's required accuracy
A small error is acceptable for rough estimation; it matters for precise engineering.
Geometric Modeling | Lesson 2 of 2
Evaluating a Model: Is It Good Enough?
A model is adequate when its error is acceptable for the task.
Evaluation process:
Estimate the error — what features were simplified or ignored?
Compare to the goal — does that error affect the decision?
Decide — if the error is acceptable, the model is adequate; otherwise refine it
Geometric Modeling | Lesson 2 of 2
Earth Models: When Does Precision Matter?
Perfect sphere ( km): adequate for most geographic calculations
Oblate spheroid (equatorial km, polar km): needed for GPS and satellite orbits
Difference: about 0.3% — negligible for rough estimates, critical for precision navigation
Geometric Modeling | Lesson 2 of 2
Human Body: Simple vs. Multi-Part Model
Approach
Estimated volume
Error
Single cylinder ( cm, cm)
L
overestimates by ~70%
Multi-part (torso + head + 4 limbs)
L
close to actual
Adding detail reduced error by 70% — but also required 6× more measurements and calculations.
Geometric Modeling | Lesson 2 of 2
Quick Check: When Does Complexity Help?
A student estimates how much paint is needed for their bedroom walls.
Should they model the room as a simple rectangular prism or measure each wall individually as a separate rectangle?
Consider: does extra detail improve accuracy? Does the task require that improvement?
Geometric Modeling | Lesson 2 of 2
Answer: Simple Model Is Better Here
Bedroom walls are already rectangular — a "composite" model gives identical results
Added complexity would add work with zero gain in accuracy
The goal is a useful estimate, not architectural precision
Complexity should be added only when it meaningfully improves accuracy for the task at hand.
Geometric Modeling | Lesson 2 of 2
Communicating Model Choices: Four Parts
When presenting a geometric model, always state:
Shape(s) used: the geometric shapes you selected
Reasoning: why those shapes are appropriate for the object
Measurements: the specific values used (with units)
Assumptions: what was simplified or ignored, and why that is acceptable
Geometric Modeling | Lesson 2 of 2
Sample Model Statement: Water Tank
I modeled the storage tank as a cylinder with m and m.
Cylinder chosen: the tank has a circular cross-section and uniform height.
Assumption: the hemispherical dome at the top is excluded (< 5% of volume).
Calculated volume: .
Geometric Modeling | Lesson 2 of 2
Your Turn: Write a Model Statement
A cylindrical grain silo has radius m and height m.
Draft a four-part model statement:
Shape selected and measurements
Why that shape is appropriate
Any features excluded and why that is acceptable
Calculated volume
Write your statement before advancing.
Geometric Modeling | Lesson 2 of 2
Key Takeaways: Calculating and Evaluating
✓ Follow the 5-step workflow: shape → measure → formula → compute → interpret
✓ Every model omits details — state your assumptions explicitly
✓ A model is adequate when its error is acceptable for the task
Watch out:
Approximation is the point, not a flaw — document omitted details
Simpler models are better when complexity adds no accuracy gain
Geometric Modeling | Lesson 2 of 2
What Comes Next: Modeling Continues
HSG.MG.A.2 — Density and geometric models:
Use mass and the volumes you can now calculate to determine density of real objects
HSG.MG.A.3 — Design problems with constraints:
Apply geometric modeling to maximize volume, minimize cost, or satisfy design requirements