The famous 40-meter high building is known as the "Torre Agbar" in Barcelona, Spain. Designed by architect Jean Nouvel, it features a unique bullet-shaped design and is illuminated with colorful LED lights at night. Completed in 2005, it has become a symbol of the city's modern architecture.
5 meters
To determine how high the ladder reaches, we can use the Pythagorean theorem. The ladder forms a right triangle with the height of the building and the distance from the building to the base of the ladder. In this case, the ladder is the hypotenuse (6 meters), the base is 1 meter, and we need to find the height (h). Using the formula ( h = \sqrt{6^2 - 1^2} = \sqrt{36 - 1} = \sqrt{35} \approx 5.92 ) meters. Thus, the ladder reaches approximately 5.92 meters up the building.
10m3
That's not a question!
no, 60cm is not very high. It is 1/6 of a meter, i mean, im about 1,70 ( 1 meter 70cm) so, yes, 60cm is tiny
The most famous building n Madrid is the Torre Picasso. It is a skyscraper that has 43 floors. It is 513 feet high.
High buildings are called as Skycrapers
The highest building in London is the 235 meter (771 feet) high office-building named "One Canada Square". The building is also known as "Canary Wharf".
5 meters
5 meters
Potential Energy = mgh=1kg x 10m/s2 x 34.5m=345kg.m2/s2
A meter is equal to approximately 39.37 inches. Therefore, a parking meter that is one meter high would be approximately 39.37 inches high.
39.37 inches high.
LAN (local area network)
Meters are used. So far, even the tallest building is less than a kilometer high.
1 meter is 0.00062137 miles.
To determine how high the ladder reaches, we can use the Pythagorean theorem. The ladder forms a right triangle with the height of the building and the distance from the building to the base of the ladder. In this case, the ladder is the hypotenuse (6 meters), the base is 1 meter, and we need to find the height (h). Using the formula ( h = \sqrt{6^2 - 1^2} = \sqrt{36 - 1} = \sqrt{35} \approx 5.92 ) meters. Thus, the ladder reaches approximately 5.92 meters up the building.