If you want to ask questions about "this formula", may I suggest that you ensure that there is "this formula" in the question?
sick
According to my maths teacher its: length x vertical height ------------------------------- 2 Hope I helped :)
All the 4 sides of a rhombus are equal, so 4 times the length of a side.
ind the area of the rhombus if AE = 20 m and DE = 32 m.
if those are the measurements then that is not a rhombus, rhombi are 4 sided shapesthat have all equal sides
sick
According to my maths teacher its: length x vertical height ------------------------------- 2 Hope I helped :)
The answer is given below.
All the 4 sides of a rhombus are equal, so 4 times the length of a side.
That is one of the ways of finding the area of a rhombus. The area is half the product of the diagonals. In this case, 1/2 of 7 x 4.4 or .154. You can also find the area of a rhombus by using one side as the base and finding an altitude for that base and multiplying them. There is a third way using trigonometry.
ind the area of the rhombus if AE = 20 m and DE = 32 m.
Find the area of a rhombs with diagonals that measure 8 and 10.
Rhombi are two dimensional, but the easiest way to find the area is to treat it like a parallelogram, or even a square. Just find Base x Height and you will get the area of a two dimensional rhombus, square, or parallelogram (among other polygons).Since volume is a three dimensional property, and rhombi are two dimensional, I will assume you just have an extruded rhombus. If I am correct, then you can just add the depth to that formula, giving you Base x Height x Depth.
if those are the measurements then that is not a rhombus, rhombi are 4 sided shapesthat have all equal sides
A = baWhere A = areab = length of the basea = altitude (height).
54
Perimeter = 4*Side so that Side = Perimeter/4 Area of a rhombus = Side * Altitude so Altitude = Area/Side = Area/(Perimeter/4) = 4*Area/Perimeter