Well, isn't that just a happy little question! To find the side length of a square with an area of 50 cm, you simply take the square root of the area. So, the side length would be the square root of 50 cm, which is approximately 7.07 cm. Just remember, there are no mistakes, only happy little accidents in math!
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"What would be the side length of a square with an area of 50 cm2?"
side A x side B = area
for a square side A = side B so
(side A)2 = area
or sqrt(area) = side A
To calculate the perimeter distance of a 50-hectare area, we first convert hectares to square meters: 50 hectares equals 500,000 square meters. If we assume the area is a perfect square, the side length would be √500,000, which is approximately 707.1 meters. The perimeter of a square is four times the side length, resulting in a perimeter of about 2,828.4 meters.
Multiply width by length to get the area. The answer would be 1450 square feet.
Area = 10*5 = 50 square feet
yes they can the square could have a side of sqrt of 50 inches just multiply that by itself and you have 50sq inches the rectangles could have a length of 5 and a length of 10. multiply them to gether and y ou have 50sq in
Its area is virtually indistinguishable from 50 square feet.