If a square has a side length of 4 centimetres, then its area is equal to 4 x 4 = 16cm2 (16 square centimetres).
If a square has a side length of 8 centimetres, then its area is equal to 8 x 8 = 64cm2 (64 square centimetres).
Therefore, by doubling the side length of a square, the squares area quadruples.
No, it will be quadrupled.
The area gets doubled.
If the altitude is not changed, the area would be doubled.
The area increases as the square of the radius (or diameter). So if you double the radius you * 4 (quadruple) the area. Treble the radius, you *9 the area.
The area quadruples.
four times the initial value
No, it will be quadrupled.
The area gets doubled.
When the diameter is doubled, perhaps? Then the area is 4 x larger.
the new area will be fourfold, not doubled. try it on squared paper and see how the shape increases from one square into four...
If the altitude is not changed, the area would be doubled.
Area = length*width new Area = 2 * length * width Area is doubled
The area increases as the square of the radius (or diameter). So if you double the radius you * 4 (quadruple) the area. Treble the radius, you *9 the area.
Refer to the question. It says the base is doubled! And when the dimensions of the base are doubled, the area is multiplied by 4.
The Area of a square can be written as it's side length^2, orA = s^2if the side length is doubled, then s' is 2s.A' = (s')^2A' = (2s)^2A' = 4s^2 = 4*AWhen the side length is doubled, the area increases by a factor of 4
It quadruples.
The area quadruples.