No.
No, the diagonals are not equal.
None but the diagonals intersect at 90 degrees
One answer is a kite.
A Rhombus * * * * * WRONG! A rhombus does not have equal diagonals. If it did it would be a square! The shape is a special case of a kite.
From Wikipedia: '...a kite, or deltoid, is a quadrilateral with two disjoint pairs of congruent adjacent sides, in contrast to a parallelogram, where the congruent sides are opposite.' In other words, a kite consists of two isosceles triangles joined at the base. Beginning with a particular isosceles triangle, it will always be possible to construct from it one kite that has equal diagonals (given that the kite may be either convex or concave). Hence an infinite number of kites do have equal diagonals, but many do not. A notable example of a kite that does have equal diagonals is a square.
Parallelogram, trapezoid, rhombus and a kite are some of them Note that a square and a rectangle have diagonals of equal lengths
The shape you're describing is a kite. A kite has two pairs of adjacent sides that are equal in length, and its diagonals intersect at right angles (90 degrees). However, the lengths of the diagonals are not equal, which distinguishes it from a rhombus.
The quadrilateral that fits this description is a kite. In a kite, there is one pair of equal angles (the angles between the pairs of equal-length sides), while the diagonals are not equal in length and do not bisect each other. Instead, one diagonal bisects the other at a right angle, but the two diagonals do not split each other into equal segments.
A quadrilateral with diagonals of different lengths can be a rectangle or a kite. In a rectangle, the diagonals are equal in length, while in a kite, the diagonals are not equal and intersect at right angles. Other quadrilaterals, like trapezoids and irregular quadrilaterals, can also have diagonals of different lengths. Therefore, many quadrilaterals can fit this description, depending on their specific properties.
A Hexagonal Kite can be deduced to a rectangle of an area equal to 0.75 Kite diagonals * sqrt (3/4) Kite diagonals = 400 square meters. Therefore, diagonal = sqrt ( 400 / ( 3/4 * sqrt(3/4) ) ) meters =~ 24.816 meters
A kite fits this description.
kite