The lateral area of a prism is the sum of the area of the lateral faces
It is the sum of the area of the lateral faces
It depends on the prism. There will be different formulae for the bases depending on type of polygon and that will also determine the number of rectangular faces.
The lateral area [L] of a right prism with base perimeter [P] and height [h] is L=Ph.
That depends on how many faces this particular prism has.
The lateral area of a prism is the sum of the area of the lateral faces
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.
The surface area of a right prism is the sum of the areas of all its faces. The formula for calculating the surface area of a right prism is 2 × (base area) + (lateral area), where the base area is the area of the base shape and the lateral area is the sum of the areas of the remaining faces. The lateral area can also be calculated by multiplying the perimeter of the base shape by the height of the prism.
It is the sum of the area of the lateral faces
It is the sum of the area of the lateral faces
A prism is a polyhedron with two parallel bases bounded by congruent polygons and with lateral faces bounded by parallelograms that connect the corresponding sides of the bases. The height of a prism is any perpendicular line drawn from a point on one base to the other base. If the the bases' shape of a prism is a triangle, we call it a triangular prism (it has 3 faces). The surface area is the sum of the bases' area and the faces' area (lateral area).
It depends on the prism. There will be different formulae for the bases depending on type of polygon and that will also determine the number of rectangular faces.
I know the surface area. 2B+ lateral (Ph)
The lateral area of a three-dimensional object, such as a prism or cylinder, refers to the combined area of all sides excluding the bases. It is calculated by finding the sum of the areas of all the lateral faces of the object.
Lateral area excludes the areas of the top and bottom faces, which are included in the surface area.
The lateral area [L] of a right prism with base perimeter [P] and height [h] is L=Ph.
No, the surface area of a prism depends on its shape. The surface area of a prism is calculated by adding the areas of all of its faces, which can vary based on the dimensions and angles of the prism.