It is 665.1 sq inches.
5.7735026918962... The formula for the area of a hexagon is A=.5ap, or A=(1/2)ap, where A=area, a=apothem, and p=perimeter. This means that, because the area is 100, 100=.5ap, so 200=ap. Because in a regular hexagon the apothem is equal to the side length, what we are really saying here is that 200=6a2. Therefore, 33.333=a2, or a= about 5.77. This is the side length.
Area in square units = 0.5*(apothem)*(perimeter)
Not if the hexagon is a regular hexagon with sides of the same length as the sides of the square.
665.1 square units.
The answer is 171.275*apex*
It is 679 square metres.
We know that the height of an equilateral triangle equals the product of one half of the side length measure with square root of 3.Since in our regular hexagon we form 6 equilateral triangles with sides length of 16 inches, the apothem length equals to 8√3 inches.
Such a hexagon is impossible. A regular hexagon with sides of 2 cm can have an apothem of sqrt(3) cm = approx 1.73.It seems you got your question garbled. A regular hexagon, with sides of 2 cm, has an area of 10.4 sq cm. If you used your measurement units properly, you would have noticed that the 10.4 was associated with square units and it had to refer to an area, not a length.
3 times the square root of 3
5.7735026918962... The formula for the area of a hexagon is A=.5ap, or A=(1/2)ap, where A=area, a=apothem, and p=perimeter. This means that, because the area is 100, 100=.5ap, so 200=ap. Because in a regular hexagon the apothem is equal to the side length, what we are really saying here is that 200=6a2. Therefore, 33.333=a2, or a= about 5.77. This is the side length.
Area in square units = 0.5*(apothem)*(perimeter)
Not if the hexagon is a regular hexagon with sides of the same length as the sides of the square.
665.1 square units.
293.72
389.40
309.12
The answer is 171.275*apex*