To find the perimeter of a square, you can use the formula ( P = 4s ), where ( s ) is the length of one side of the square. If you provide the side length of the smaller square, I can calculate the perimeter for you. Otherwise, simply multiply the side length by 4 to get the perimeter.
No. Consider two rectangles: 1 x 10 and 4 x 5 The 1 x 10 has a perimeter of 22 and an area of 10 The 4 x 5 has a perimeter of 18 and an area of 20 Smaller perimeter, twice the area.
well a square has 4 sides but... um, a "squere"? unless it was a typo... four. now a cube has six.
yes
16
± 17.888544
that would be a squere xD
Yes. But using P=4s is easier with a square.
No, the area will get smaller, not the perimeter.
the ratio of the perimeter of triangle ABC to the perimeter of triangle JKL is 2:1. what is the perimeter of triangle JKL?
No. Consider two rectangles: 1 x 10 and 4 x 5 The 1 x 10 has a perimeter of 22 and an area of 10 The 4 x 5 has a perimeter of 18 and an area of 20 Smaller perimeter, twice the area.
yes
well a square has 4 sides but... um, a "squere"? unless it was a typo... four. now a cube has six.
16
± 17.888544
There are almost infinite possibilities as you get smaller and smaller
Bigger than what ? Smaller than what ? If you have a certain perimeter and you want to cram the most area inside it, or if you have a certain area and you want to enclose it in the shortest perimeter, then you must make the perimeter circular. If you have only a limited number of fence posts and a circular perimeter isn't practical, then you make the perimeter square.
There is insufficient information to answer the question. For a given area, the perimeter depends upon the shape. For a given area, the circle will have the smallest perimeter. For polygons, regular polygons will have a smaller perimeter than an irregular one of the same area. Also, for regular polygons, the greater the number of sides, the smaller the perimeter.