If you know one of the sides of both the rectangles than you just divide them by one another to find the scale factor.
The area of any rectangle, large or small, is calculated by multiplying length times width.
There isn't: for all faces to be rectangles there have to be 6, of which opposite sides are equal in length and breadth. (A cuboid)
No. Different rectangles, all with the same area, may have a different perimeter. Example:* A rectangle of 4 x 1 has an area of 4 square units, and a perimeter of 2(4+1) = 10. * A rectangle of 2 x 2 has an area of 4 square units, and a perimeter of 2(2+2) = 8. * A rectangle of 8 x 1/2 has an area of 4 square units, and a perimeter of 2(8 + 1/2) = 17. In fact, for any given area, you can make the perimeter arbitrarily large. On the other hand, you get the lowest perimeter if your rectangle is a square.
Area of a rectangle is Base(B) times Height(H).Area of smaller rectangle is BH.Area of larger rectangle is 2BH.Area of larger rectangle is twice as large as the smaller rectangle.
If you know one of the sides of both the rectangles than you just divide them by one another to find the scale factor.
That's a stupid question because rectangles are 2 dimensional and gallons are a 3 dimensional value.
Circles and rectangles are plane (2-dimensional) figures, so it doesn't seem that they can be used to construct solids.
Yes!
An arbitrary large number is the answer for anyrectangle, up to that with a length of 9cm, and 0cm as the width will have a perimeter of 18cm.Similarly, any rectangle up to that with sides 0cm long, and a width of 9cm will have your 18cm perimeter.
Maybe... the fraction of the rectangle and the large rectangle makes both of them to represent so that they can connect back together again.
The area of any rectangle, large or small, is calculated by multiplying length times width.
There isn't: for all faces to be rectangles there have to be 6, of which opposite sides are equal in length and breadth. (A cuboid)
No. Different rectangles, all with the same area, may have a different perimeter. Example:* A rectangle of 4 x 1 has an area of 4 square units, and a perimeter of 2(4+1) = 10. * A rectangle of 2 x 2 has an area of 4 square units, and a perimeter of 2(2+2) = 8. * A rectangle of 8 x 1/2 has an area of 4 square units, and a perimeter of 2(8 + 1/2) = 17. In fact, for any given area, you can make the perimeter arbitrarily large. On the other hand, you get the lowest perimeter if your rectangle is a square.
Large cent is equivalent to rectangle
Area of a rectangle is Base(B) times Height(H).Area of smaller rectangle is BH.Area of larger rectangle is 2BH.Area of larger rectangle is twice as large as the smaller rectangle.
rectangular prism