The side lengths are 12 m and the diagonal is 16.97 m
The answer will depend on what information about the square you have: its perimeter, area, length of diagonal.
To find the perimeter of a square with a diagonal of 16 cm, we first need to determine the side length of the square using the Pythagorean theorem. The diagonal of a square divides it into two right-angled triangles, with the diagonal being the hypotenuse. Using the formula a^2 + b^2 = c^2, where a and b are the two sides of the triangle and c is the hypotenuse, we can calculate that each side of the square is 8√2 cm. Since a square has four equal sides, the perimeter is 4 times the side length, giving us a perimeter of 32√2 cm.
Side = diagonal/1.5Side = 12Perimeter = 12 * 4Perimeter = 48
To find the area of a square with a diagonal of 14, we first need to determine the length of one side of the square. Using the Pythagorean theorem, we can calculate that the side length is 7√2. Then, we can find the area of the square by squaring the side length, which gives us 98 square units.
About 11.31 units.
The answer depends on what information you do have: the length of a side, or a diagonal, the area, ... If a side is of length s cm then the perimeter is 4*s cm.
The answer will depend on what information about the square you have: its perimeter, area, length of diagonal.
"... if it is 50cm". The question does not say what "it" is. A side length, a diagonal, something else.
The side lengths will be 14.142 cm each, giving a perimeter of 56.569 cm.
To find the perimeter of a square with a diagonal of 16 cm, we first need to determine the side length of the square using the Pythagorean theorem. The diagonal of a square divides it into two right-angled triangles, with the diagonal being the hypotenuse. Using the formula a^2 + b^2 = c^2, where a and b are the two sides of the triangle and c is the hypotenuse, we can calculate that each side of the square is 8√2 cm. Since a square has four equal sides, the perimeter is 4 times the side length, giving us a perimeter of 32√2 cm.
Divide the length of the diagonal of a square by 1.4142 (which is the square root of 2) to find the length of a side. Similarly, to find the length of the diagonal of a square, multiply the length of a side by 1.4142.
As a square has right angles, the diagonal forms a right triangle with two of the sides of the square. Therefore use Pythagoras: diagonal² = side² + side² → diagonal² = 2side² → diagonal = side × √2 Therefore to find the length of the diagonal of a square, multiply the side length of a square by the square root of 2.
A "regular quadrilateral" is a square. The word "radius" isn't used for squares (or polygons in general). To get the length of a side, divide the perimeter by 4. To get the diagonal of a square, multiply the length of a side by the square root of 2.
The diagonal length = 7.07 inches.
The perimeter of a square is simply 4 times the length of a side.The perimeter of a square is simply 4 times the length of a side.The perimeter of a square is simply 4 times the length of a side.The perimeter of a square is simply 4 times the length of a side.
Side = diagonal/1.5Side = 12Perimeter = 12 * 4Perimeter = 48
The length of one side of a square with a 16-centimeter diagonal is: 11.31 cm