Sides must add to 50 and multiply to 600; 20 & 30 fit.
Length is 30 cm, width is 20 cm.
The perimeter is 82 meters.
What is the perimeter of a rectangle 5 meter by 650 centimeters?
1 metre perimeter = 100 centimetre perimeter.
Since you are using integers, the first place to look would be if two sides are equal to 1 meter. Then the other two sides are 24/2 - 1 meter, or 11 meters. Once you know this, you can divide 24 by 4 (the 4 sides of a rectangle) to see that a square version of this rectangle is 6 meters. So, all of the possible dimensions (without reversed duplicates) go from 1 meter to 6 meters: 1x11 2x10 3x9 4x8 5x7 6x6
You cannot. A square metre (m2) is a measure of area, with dimensions [L2]. A linear metre (m) is a measure of distance, with dimensions [L]. Basic dimensional analysis teaches that you cannot convert between measures with different dimensions such as these without additional information. But suppose you have a square with an area of 20 square meter (m2). The sides of this square will be the square root of 20 m2 = (√20) m = 4,472 m. A rectangle that is 4 meter x 5 meter will also have an area of 20 m2.
The perimeter is 82 meters.
What is the perimeter of a rectangle 5 meter by 650 centimeters?
Its dimensions are: 0.5 meters by 2 meters
1 metre perimeter = 100 centimetre perimeter.
To find the perimeter of a square, you add up all four sides. Since the area of the square is given as 55 square meters, we need to calculate the side length of the square first. To find the side length, we take the square root of the area, which is √55 ≈ 7.42 meters. Finally, to find the perimeter, we multiply the side length by 4, giving us a perimeter of approximately 29.68 meters.
Perimeter = 2*(Length + Width) = 2*(4+1) metres = 10 metres.
Since you are using integers, the first place to look would be if two sides are equal to 1 meter. Then the other two sides are 24/2 - 1 meter, or 11 meters. Once you know this, you can divide 24 by 4 (the 4 sides of a rectangle) to see that a square version of this rectangle is 6 meters. So, all of the possible dimensions (without reversed duplicates) go from 1 meter to 6 meters: 1x11 2x10 3x9 4x8 5x7 6x6
You cannot. A square metre (m2) is a measure of area, with dimensions [L2]. A linear metre (m) is a measure of distance, with dimensions [L]. Basic dimensional analysis teaches that you cannot convert between measures with different dimensions such as these without additional information. But suppose you have a square with an area of 20 square meter (m2). The sides of this square will be the square root of 20 m2 = (√20) m = 4,472 m. A rectangle that is 4 meter x 5 meter will also have an area of 20 m2.
Divide by 100: 43cm / 100 = 0.43 meters.
The dimensions are 7 by 12 meters Check: perimeter = 2*(7+12) = 38 meters and area = 7*12 = 84 square meters
If the area is one square meter, the side length is one meter. Therefore, the perimeter is four meters.
Each side is 0.25m