30 square cm
A square with a side length of 5 centimeters has an area of 25 square centimeters.
To find the length of the sides of a square given its area, you take the square root of the area. In this case, the area is 25 square centimeters. The square root of 25 is 5, so each side of the square is 5 centimeters long.
Square root of 25= 5. 5 + 144 + 13 = 162.
To cover a 1 square meter area with 5-centimeter squares, first convert the area to square centimeters: 1 square meter = 10,000 square centimeters. Each 5-centimeter square has an area of 25 square centimeters (5 cm x 5 cm). Dividing 10,000 square centimeters by 25 square centimeters per square gives 400 squares needed to cover the 1 square meter area without overlapping.
If the area is 25 centimetres, then the length of a single side will be sqrt(25) = 5 centimetres.
Area = pi R2 = 25 pi = 78.54 square centimeters(rounded)
It is the same as 16+25 = 41
To cover a 1 square meter area, you first convert the area to square centimeters. Since 1 meter equals 100 centimeters, 1 square meter is 10,000 square centimeters. Each 5 centimeter square has an area of 25 square centimeters. Therefore, to find the number of 5 centimeter squares needed, divide 10,000 by 25, which equals 400. Thus, 400 squares are needed to completely cover a 1 meter square.
there isn't one
The area of square is : 400.0
17 plus 8 is 25, and the square root of 25 is 5. Alternatively, the square root of 17 is about 4.123; adding 8 to that gives about 12.123.
To determine how many 5-centimeter squares are needed to cover a larger square, you first need to know the dimensions of that larger square. If the side length of the larger square is ( L ) centimeters, then the area of the larger square is ( L^2 ) square centimeters. Each 5-centimeter square has an area of ( 25 ) square centimeters. Therefore, the number of 5-centimeter squares required would be ( \frac{L^2}{25} ), assuming ( L ) is a multiple of 5 to ensure complete coverage without overlapping.