Yes, it is possible.
Yes - of course it is !
quadruples it
It is increased by x sqrt(2).
no it is not possible
Yes, it is possible.
no
No that is not possible Obviously 'doubling' is twice as much. Twice the ingredients and twice the work equals twice the results. Do it times a 1000 and you have 1000 times the results!
Yes - of course it is !
quadruples it
It is increased by x sqrt(2).
When you double a number, the square root of the new one is sqrt(2) = 1.4142 times the square root of the original one.
doubling the square apex quiz 3.3.2
Doubling the length of the sides of a square results in the area being quadrupled (four times the original area).
No. If you double the length of the sides, you multiply the area by 4. For example, a 10x10 square has an area of 100, but a 20x20 square has an area of 400.
If the circumference of a circle is doubled, the area will be four times bigger. It's like having a square with one metre sides. If we double the length of sides, that is - two metre long sides. the length around will be eight instead if four metres. The area will not be doubled from one square metre to two square meters. It will be four square metres instead. Lengths only grow in one direction so doubling is doubling, but areas grow in two directions - length and width at the same time. Therefore, areas grow and grow, doubling this way and doubling that way, so the doubling is doubled making it four times. Trebling would be trebled making a three times length increase into a nine times area increase.
Because of the inverse-square law, doubling the distance will change the gravitational force by a factor of 1/4 (calculated as 1 divided by 2 squared).