perpendicular height
Surface = 2b + Ph (b is the area of the base P is the perimeter of the base)ORSurface Area= 1/2(B x h)(2) + (s1+s2+s3)hORSurface Area= (B x h) + (s1+s2+s3)hB= Base.H= Height.s1, s2, s3= Basically the perimeter of the base.Remember: the base of a triangular prism is not always on the bottom.
SA = 2B + Ph SA = 2(1/2ab) + (b + c + d)h SA = ab + (b + c + d)h
The surface area formula for cylinders and prisms is SA = 2B + l where B is the area of your base l is your lateral area which is equal to l=ph where p is the perimeter (or circumference in your case) of the base and h is the altitude All cylinders have circular bases so the base area b = pi * r^2 where r is the radius of the circle the formula for circumference is 2*pi*r, where r is again the radius So, l = 2*pi*r*h And finally SA = 2*pi*r^2 + 2*pi*r*h This can be simplified to SA = 2*pi*r*(r+h)
pK1 = 2.3, pKr = 6, pK2 = 9.7 (all approximate) at physiological pH, histidine has no net charge. at pH 1, below all pKas and charge is +2 at pH 3, amine group proton pops off, so +1 charge at pH 5, still below 6 and above 2.3 so +1 charge if had pH above 6, for instance... at pH of 8 net charge is zero, or neutral... such that it is neutral at physiological pH (a bit above a pH of 7) at pH 11, exceeds all pKas of amine, acid group, and R group. So net charge of -1 amine deprotonation, carboxylic acid deprotonation, and R group deprotonation happen pH 11 because it exceeds all pKs
great then 7
S=2B+Ph
I know the surface area. 2B+ lateral (Ph)
The formula for calculating the surface area of a prism is SA 2B Ph, where B is the area of the base, P is the perimeter of the base, and h is the height of the prism. The angle of the prism does not directly affect the surface area calculation.
Okay, the last person who edited this, totally screwed up. The formula to find the surface area of a square prism is 2B+Ph, multiply the length of the width of the base to get the area, then multiply that by two. After you have multiplied the base twice, et the perimeter of the base and multiply it by the height of the square prism.
LA=ph
To calculate the surface area of a triangular prism, you need to find the area of the two triangular bases and the three rectangular faces. The formula for the surface area of a triangular prism is SA = 2B + PH, where B is the area of the base, P is the perimeter of the base, and H is the height of the prism. Given the bases are 4 cm^2 each and the sides are 10 cm^2, you would first find the perimeter of the base (P = 2s + b) and then calculate the surface area using the formula provided.
The lateral area [L] of a right prism with base perimeter [P] and height [h] is L=Ph.
We think the answer is 4600cm2. Based on the formula 2b + Ph = SA Hope that helps!
The formula is 2 times the area of its base plus (side length) times (number of sides) times (height of the prism) You multiply the first two, multiply the last three separately, and then add the two answers together. Technically the formula is 2B+Ph where B is the base area, P is the base's perimeter, and h is the height.
The lateral area [L] of a right prism with base perimeter [P] and height [h] is L=Ph.
The lateral area of a prism is the sum of the areas of all the lateral faces. A lateral face is not a base. The surface area is the total area of all faces.Lateral Area: The lateral area of a right prism with base perimeter P and height h is L=Ph.Surface Area: The surface area of a right prism with lateral area L and base area is B is S = L + 2B, or S = Ph + 2B.
SA = BA + ph SA = BA + LA because LA = ph (perimeter x height)