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How do you change scale factors?

Published in Geometric Scaling 2 mins read

You change the size of a shape using scale factors by multiplying its side lengths.

Understanding and applying scale factors is a fundamental concept in geometry used to resize figures while maintaining their shape. It's not about changing the scale factor number itself, but rather about using a chosen scale factor to modify the dimensions of a shape.

Applying a Scale Factor: The Process

The core method for applying a scale factor to a shape is straightforward:

  • To scale a shape up or down, you multiply every side length of a shape by the scale factor to increase or decrease the size.

This means if you have a shape with sides of length A, B, and C, and you apply a scale factor of k, the new shape will have corresponding side lengths of Ak, Bk, and Ck.

What Happens to the Shape?

When you apply a scale factor:

  • Side Lengths: All corresponding side lengths of the original shape are multiplied by the scale factor.
  • Angles: The sizes of the angles do not change. The shape remains proportionally the same, just larger or smaller.
  • Size: The overall size of the shape changes based on the scale factor value:
    • Changing a shape by a scale factor greater than 1 will make the shape a larger figure. This is an enlargement.
    • A scale factor between 0 and 1 (a fraction or decimal) will make the shape a smaller figure. This is a reduction.
    • A scale factor of 1 means the shape remains the same size.

Example of Scaling a Shape

Let's consider a simple rectangle with side lengths 4 units and 6 units.

Original Dimension Operation Scaled Dimension (Factor = 2) Scaled Dimension (Factor = 0.5)
Length = 6 Multiply by Scale Factor 6 * 2 = 12 6 * 0.5 = 3
Width = 4 Multiply by Scale Factor 4 * 2 = 8 4 * 0.5 = 2

In this example:

  • Using a scale factor of 2 (greater than 1) created a larger rectangle with sides 12 and 8.
  • Using a scale factor of 0.5 (between 0 and 1) created a smaller rectangle with sides 3 and 2.
  • The angles of the rectangle (all 90 degrees) remain unchanged in both scaled versions.

In essence, changing the scale factor you apply directly changes the resulting size of the shape.