the area of a square is 49m^2 what is the length of one of its sides
NO. A square has 4 equal sides with the sides perpendicular each other. A circle has infinite sides.
The length of the sides of a square if it covers 222 square yards is: 14.9 yards.
Say the radius of the circle is x. This makes the area of the circle pi x2. Since the length of the square's sides is the diameter of the circle, 2x, its area is 2x * 2x = 4x2. The percentage occupied by the circle is the area of the circle divided by the area of the square times 100 pi/4 x 100; pi/4 x 100 = 100pi/4 = 25pi = 78.6%.
If a square's area is 10 square feet, the length of one of its sides is 3.16227766 feet.
the area of a square is 49m^2 what is the length of one of its sides
The diameter length of the circle would be the same as the side length of the square. If a is the side of the square, then the radius is a/2, and the area of the circle would be (1/4)(pi)(a^2).
You just add up the length of all the sides. There are special formulae for special cases; for example in a square, you multiply the length of one side by 4 (since all 4 sides have the same length).In the case of a circle, the perimeter is called "circumference", and it is calculated as 2 x radius x pi.You just add up the length of all the sides. There are special formulae for special cases; for example in a square, you multiply the length of one side by 4 (since all 4 sides have the same length).In the case of a circle, the perimeter is called "circumference", and it is calculated as 2 x radius x pi.You just add up the length of all the sides. There are special formulae for special cases; for example in a square, you multiply the length of one side by 4 (since all 4 sides have the same length).In the case of a circle, the perimeter is called "circumference", and it is calculated as 2 x radius x pi.You just add up the length of all the sides. There are special formulae for special cases; for example in a square, you multiply the length of one side by 4 (since all 4 sides have the same length).In the case of a circle, the perimeter is called "circumference", and it is calculated as 2 x radius x pi.
Assuming the circle is tangent to the sides of the square, then the edges of the circle meet the square at the midpoint on each of the four sides. So the diameter of the circle is the same as the length of a side of the square. So all you need to do is find the length from the total area by taking the square root of the area (since A = s2), which gives you the diameter, then halve it to get the radius.
Well, since the circle is inside the square, the edges of the square define the limits of the circle. Since we have a square, the length of each side is the square root of 800ft. The radius of the circle is half the length of the sides. Therefore, the answer is half of (the square root of 800), which makes for an ugly radius value of "14.142135623730950488016887242097" ft
A square has all 4 sides equal in length. A four sided closed figure with all sides different length is called a quadrilateral.
If a parallelogram has all four sides the same length it's called a square.
Circumference refers to the distance around the outside of a circle. The distance around a square is its perimeter, which is the sum of the lengths of the four sides. Since all sides of a square are of the same length, the perimeter of a square is also four times the length of one side.
they dont have to be they can be different A rectangle with all sides the same length can also be called a square.
NO. A square has 4 equal sides with the sides perpendicular each other. A circle has infinite sides.
The sides of the Square.
The 4 sides of a square are equal in length