Depends what you are drawing on.
area = 144 square units perimeter = 48 units
12
i am doing my homework right now and I am stuck on that problem
Yes: P = 2(L + W) which is 32 in each example.
3*27 = 81 and 3+3+27+27 = a perimeter of 60 inches
area = 144 square units perimeter = 48 units
12
Not necessarily. Let's say that there is a circle with the area of 10. Now there is a star with the area of 10. They do not have the same perimeter, do they? That still applies with rectangles. There might be a very long skinny rectangle and a square next to each other with the same area, but that does not mean that they have the same perimeter. Now if the rectangles are congruent then yes.
180
i am doing my homework right now and I am stuck on that problem
no because one rectangle may be 3x4 which the perimeter is 14 and one rectangle may be 5x2 which as well equals 14
Yes: P = 2(L + W) which is 32 in each example.
3*27 = 81 and 3+3+27+27 = a perimeter of 60 inches
4.5*18 = 81 and 4.5+4.5+18+18 = a perimeter of 45 inches 3*27 = 81 and 3+3+27+27 = a perimeter of 60 inches
Yes, because 12 + 4 = 16 = 13 + 3 and in each case, the perimeter is 2*(L + B) = 32 metres.
* It is unclear if the question is asking about two rectangles, each with a perimeter of 16, or two rectangles whose perimeters sum to 16. This answer assumes the former.Other than the 4x4 square, which coincidentally has both a perimeter and area of 16, some examples would be:1 x 7 rectangle : perimeter 16 in. , area 7 sq. in2 x 6 rectangle : perimeter 16 in., area 12 sq. in3 x 5 rectangle: perimeter 16 in., area 15 sq. inYou can calculate that for a given perimeter, the largest area is found in the square with a side measurement of P/4, i.e. the length and the width are the same.
It depends what units you use for each side ! A 1cm x 15cm rectangle has a perimeter of 16cm. So does a 2cm x 4cm one ! If you start using millimetres, there are many more possibilities !