Yes, it can exist.
Area = 16*24 = 384 square cm
Oddly enough the perimeter is 16 centimeters.
A centimetre is a unit of length. A square centimetre is a unit of area. The two units are therefore incompatible.
A perimeter is a measure of length and so cannot be 16 square centimetres - which is a measure of area. As it happens, a square with a perimeter of 16 centimetres will have sides of 4 cm and so an area of 16 square centimetres.
3 cm
Area = 16*24 = 384 square cm
16
16 square cm
Oddly enough the perimeter is 16 centimeters.
Area = (side)2 = 16 square centimeters Perimeter = 4 x side = 16 centimeters
201.06 square centimeters.
A centimetre is a unit of length. A square centimetre is a unit of area. The two units are therefore incompatible.
A square with an area of 16 square centimeters has side lengths of 4 centimeters, as the area is calculated by squaring the length of one side (4 cm × 4 cm = 16 cm²). This shape's area is indeed not 12 square centimeters. Additionally, other shapes such as a rectangle with dimensions of 4 cm by 4 cm also meet this criterion, as long as their area equals 16 cm² and not 12 cm².
A perimeter is a measure of length and so cannot be 16 square centimetres - which is a measure of area. As it happens, a square with a perimeter of 16 centimetres will have sides of 4 cm and so an area of 16 square centimetres.
3 cm
A square with side length 4 centimetres has an area of 4 x 4 = 16 cm2 (16 square centimetres).
28 square centimeters