1, 19
2, 18
3, 17
4, 16
5, 15
6, 14
7, 13
8, 12
9, 11
10,10 (a square)
It is 182 cm.
The perimeter.
Tripling the side lengths of a pentagon will result in tripling its perimeter. The perimeter is the sum of all the side lengths, so if each side is multiplied by three, the total perimeter also increases by the same factor. Therefore, if the original perimeter is (P), the new perimeter becomes (3P).
You could have an isosceles triangle with sides 3, 3, and 2. I think that's the only one.
The perimeter is doubled.
There is only one equilateral triangle with a perimeter of 60 units. Its side lengths are integers.
It is 182 cm.
The perimeter.
Tripling the side lengths of a pentagon will result in tripling its perimeter. The perimeter is the sum of all the side lengths, so if each side is multiplied by three, the total perimeter also increases by the same factor. Therefore, if the original perimeter is (P), the new perimeter becomes (3P).
You could have an isosceles triangle with sides 3, 3, and 2. I think that's the only one.
Both the side lengths and the perimeter are linear measurements, therefore they are proportional. In other words, twice the side length results in twice the perimeter.
The perimeter is doubled.
Lengths of: equal side+equal side+base = perimeter
Side length x 6 = perimeter
perimeter is the sum of all sides.
The perimeter is 26 units.
Doubling the side lengths of a right triangle increases each side by a factor of two. Since the perimeter is the sum of all three sides, the new perimeter becomes twice the original perimeter. Therefore, if you double the side lengths, the perimeter also doubles. This change maintains the triangle's shape but scales it proportionally.