Well, well, well, look who's trying to test my math skills! If a square has an area of 10000 square meters, then each side measures 100 meters. To find the perimeter, you just add up all four sides, which gives you a grand total of 400 meters. Voila!
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To find the perimeter of a square with an area of 10,000 square meters, we first need to calculate the side length of the square. Since the area of a square is side length squared, we can find the side length by taking the square root of the area: √10,000 = 100 meters. Once we have the side length, we can calculate the perimeter of the square by multiplying the side length by 4 (since all sides of a square are equal): 100 meters x 4 = 400 meters. Therefore, the perimeter of the square is 400 meters.
I will lead you in finding this answer. The first thing you would do is use the formula A = s^2 backwards. In other words, you will plug in the 10000 as your area and go backwards to find your answer. The best way to do this is to find the square root of 10000. Then, after you find your answer, multiply it by 4 to find the perimeter, which is 400. Hope this helps for future reference!
8th grader
100 x 100 = 10000 square cm for one square metre. So 70000 for 7 square metres.
10000 square feet are 929 square meters.
929.0304 m2
10,000 square meters equates to 2.47 acres or 107,639.1 square feet.
It is obviously 1057 square meters, and, perhaps not so obviously, 0.1057 hectare.