First, find the area of each 2-D face of the figure, then add those up.
Well it matters if you put it in a 3-dimensional or a 2-dimensional figure because if you turn it into a 3-dimensional figure the the surface would have a flat surface with volume and area.If you draw a quad in 2-D then the figure you draw is the surface.
The trapezoid is a plane figure which has surface Area, but no volume but if there was a 3d figure your equation would be. The Surface Area of a trapezoid = ½(b1+b2) x h X Height of figure.
If it's a 3 dimensional shape then it is volume otherwise it is surface area
The surface area of a figure does not provide enough information to determine its volume. Indeed, it does no even determine its shape.The volume can have any positive value up to 474.018 cubic units.The surface area of a figure does not provide enough information to determine its volume. Indeed, it does no even determine its shape.The volume can have any positive value up to 474.018 cubic units.The surface area of a figure does not provide enough information to determine its volume. Indeed, it does no even determine its shape.The volume can have any positive value up to 474.018 cubic units.The surface area of a figure does not provide enough information to determine its volume. Indeed, it does no even determine its shape.The volume can have any positive value up to 474.018 cubic units.
Volume is defined only for three-dimensional objects. A perfectly flat surface (impossible to find or create in our three-dimensional physical world) cannot have a volume.
NO. This is the way to get the volume of a prism, not the surface area of any three-dimensional figure. To find the surface area of a three-dimensional figure, you must find the area of each of its faces and then add the side-areas together.
What is meant by 96? Need more information!
Five. Length, width, height, surface area, and volume
A two dimensional figure does not have volume or depth such as flat surfaced polygons.
Three-dimensional figures are typically measured by their volume and surface area. Volume quantifies the amount of space enclosed within the figure, while surface area measures the total area that the surface of the figure occupies. Together, these measurements provide a comprehensive understanding of the figure's size and capacity. Examples include cubes, spheres, and cylinders, each with specific formulas for calculating these properties.
nothing
it would be the figure's volume