Square root 529 which is 23 m
Take the square root of the area.
i think you find the square root of the area. that's the length and the width, so you multiply it.
The length and width of a square by definition are of equal length. The area (A) of a square = d2, where d is the length of one side. If the area is known, then the length of the side of a square, d = √A (square root of A).
Divide the perimeter by 4 and then square the result to find the area of the square.
For a square, the length of each side is equal to the square root of the area. In this case, the square root of 36 is 6. So, each side measures six units.
x=length of square x multiplied by y = area of square y=width of square width multiplied by length = area
Length times widthex. a 1 by 1 square's are would be 1
To find the area of a square you multiply its length by its width.
All four sides of a square are of equal length. To find the area, you square the length of one side. To find the length of one side from the given area, find the square root of the area. In this case, the square root of 25 is 5. Hence, the length of a side is 5 yards.
For a square, take the square root of the area, to find length of each side.Sqrt(9 m2) = 3 m
how do you find area of a square that has sides of length 96 inches
Take the square root of the area.
For a rectangle or square, Area = Length * Width So Length = Area / Width.
The side length would be 7. It is 7 because when you find the area of a square, the equation is s2=A. (s=side length A=area). When you only have the area of a square and you want to find the side length, you replace "A" with the area (in this case 49). Then you would have s2=49. To find the side length you would square both sides of the equation. √(s2)=√(49). 49 is perfect square so it's not too difficult to find out the answer. You would be left with s=7. Therefore the side length is 7. Step by step: s2=A s2=49 inches2 √(s2)=√(49) s=7 inches2
Multiply the length and width to find the area of both a rectangle and square.
Make the segment into a square, find the area of the square, then find the square root of the area because the square root is equal to the side length
To find the area of a square, where all four sides are of equal length, you simply square the length of one side: for example, the area of a square of four inches is sixteen square inches, or 42 in. To find the length of the side of a square when you only know the area, you simply reverse the process, and take the square root of the area. The square root of 16 is four, for example.