The slant height doesn't help you get the answer.
Apart from the perimeter, you would need SOME other information about the base; either the number of sides, or anything that can help you calculate the number of sides.
For example, if the base is a regular pentagon, you divide the perimeter by 5, and then use the formula for a regular pentagon, to calculate the base.
LA=1/2ps
Surface Area= 1/2perimeter x slant height + B * * * * * Perimeter = perimeter of base. B = Area of base.
LA=1/2ps
The volume of a regular pyramid with a square base of 8cm and a slant height of 5 cm is: 64 cm3
1/2 times the perimeter of the base times slant height
LA=1/2ps
Surface Area= 1/2perimeter x slant height + B * * * * * Perimeter = perimeter of base. B = Area of base.
LA = 1/2psnewtest3
LA=1/2ps
The volume of a regular pyramid with a square base of 8cm and a slant height of 5 cm is: 64 cm3
The answer is given below.
1/2(p)(sh) ~which means~ 1/2 x perimeter x slant height slant height= pathagorean theory= c squared= a squared+b squared
1/2 times the perimeter of the base times slant height
LA=1/2ps
False
Yes, the slant height of a regular square pyramid is longer than its altitude. The altitude is the perpendicular height from the apex to the center of the base, while the slant height is the distance from the apex to the midpoint of a side of the base. In a right triangle formed by the altitude, half the base side, and the slant height, the slant height serves as the hypotenuse, making it inherently longer than the altitude.
slant height of the pyramid Louvre in Paris=28 meters