The surface area of a box is the sum of the areas of the individual faces.
If that's what you said, then there is no difference.
manila
surface area is the area of a 3D object radius is half of the diameter of a circle
Lateral area excludes the areas of the top and bottom faces, which are included in the surface area.
Curved surface area includes the area of the length of the cylinder only whereas surface area includes the two bases as well...
Area is the measure of a two-dimensional space enclosed by a shape, and surface area is the sum of all the areas of the faces of a three-dimensional solid.
manila
the difference between this is that surface area
Area is usually pertaining to the area of a 2d object but surface is 3d object
the formulas for lateral area dont include the figures bases. surface area does.
surface area is the area of a 3D object radius is half of the diameter of a circle
Lateral area excludes the areas of the top and bottom faces, which are included in the surface area.
Curved surface area includes the area of the length of the cylinder only whereas surface area includes the two bases as well...
Area is the measure of a two-dimensional space enclosed by a shape, and surface area is the sum of all the areas of the faces of a three-dimensional solid.
consider a cylinder..SA is the whole area of the surface of the cylinder including the circles at the two ends..while LSA is only the area of surface of walls excluding the two circles..
Area is the extent or measurement of a surface, or piece of land. Square miles are one way of measuring area.
Area is used to find the amount of square units insided of a 1- dimensional figure. The formula is: Length x Width= area Surface is quite different. Think of it this way. You have a cardboard box. If you cut each seam of the box and found the area of each section, added them together, you would have the surface area. The formula is: (Length x width x 2)+(width x height x 2)+(height x length x 2)= Surface area
The formula for vacuum force can be calculated as: Vacuum force = Pressure difference x Area Where the pressure difference is the difference in pressure between the vacuum and the surrounding atmosphere, and the area is the surface area over which the force is acting.