50cm = 0.5 meters 500 divided by 0.5 = 1000 1000 turns
The area of a circle with the diameter of 3m is 7.069 m2
When m = 3 the value of 3m is 3*3 = 9
12m + 2n - 3m + 11n = 9m + 13n
Using trigonometry and the sine rule the area of the regular 5 sided pentagon with a perimeter of 50cm works out as 172.048 square cm rounded to 3 decimal places.
Hi
The answer is 22.02 meters
firstly, 1 metre is 2 sets of 50cm 2m=4 sets of 50cm 3m=6 sets of 50cm 4m=8 sets of 50cm 5m=10 sets of 50cm 6m=12 sets of 50cm 7m=14 sets of 50cm 8m=16 sets of 50cm 9m=18 sets of 50cm 10m=20 sets of 50cm 11m=22 sets of 50cm 12m=24 sets of 50cm 13m=26 sets of 50cm 14m=28 sets of 50cm 15m=30 sets of 50cm 16m=32 sets of 50cm 17m=34 sets of 50cm 18m=36 sets of 50cm 19m=38 sets of 50cm 20m=40 sets of 50cm 21m=42 sets of 50cm 22m=44 sets of 50cm 23m=46 sets of 50cm 24m=48 sets of 50cm 25m=50 sets of 50cm 26m=52 sets of 50cm 27m=54 sets of 50cm 28m=56 sets of 50cm 29m=58 sets of 50cm 30m=60 sets of 50cm if the measurements are 8 by 30 metres, this means that the area is covered by 16 times 60 amount of tiles which is the amount of 960 tiles altogether Source: A successful Graduate of Cambridge University
50cm is 0.5 metres
12meters
1 cm is 10mm, so 50cm is 500mm.
50cm added to 50cm = 100
50cm
50cm x 50cm tile = 7.24/SF per tile 466/7.24 = 64.36 you would need 65 tiles
0.5m
0.0005 km
To find out how many 50cm by 50cm tiles can fit into a 1m square, we first need to convert the measurements to the same units. Since 1m is equal to 100cm, a 1m square is equivalent to a 100cm by 100cm square. To calculate how many 50cm by 50cm tiles can fit into this square, we divide the area of the 1m square by the area of each tile (100cm by 100cm ÷ 50cm by 50cm). This gives us 4 tiles that can fit into a 1m square.