n:8
15:10
n=12
All of the following will be in the form of (length in meters, width in meters) (1,64) (2,32) (4,16) (8,8) (16,4) (32,2) (64,1)
The area, measured in square metres, depends on the shape. There are different formulae for rectangles or circles or triangles.
Area can never be as low as the perimeter value -- impossible question.No impossible if read correctly...18 meters squared is the area and 18 meters is the perimeter.
The area of a rectangle is equal to its length times its width. So any two rectangles for which these dimensions have the same product, the area is the same. For example, a rectangle that is two meters wide and three meters long and one that is one meter wide and six meters long will both have an area of six square meters.
You can't tell the dimensions if you only know the area. There are an infinite number of different rectangles that all have the same area.
Yes, rectangles measuring 12x4 and 13x3 have the same perimeter because: 2*(12+4) = 32 meters and 2*(13+3) = 32 meters
Perimeter is 2(length + width) 2(12+4) is 32 2(13+3) is also 32, so yes
If it's a square, then each side is 3 meters long.But there are an infinite number of different rectangles, with all differentlengths and widths, that all have areas of 9 square meters.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes they But their areas are
The perimeter of the first one is 12 + 4 + 12 + 4 = 32 The perimeter of the second one is 13 + 3 + 13 + 3 = 32 So, yes, their perimeters have the same length.