You could use h*BA cubic units, provided that the units used for BA are squares of units used for h. If BA is in square centimetres and h is in metres, the formula will give a answer which is not easy to understand.
Lateral Area=Perimeter of the base * height perimeter=20 height=6 so, Lateral Area=20 * 6 Lateral Area=120cm
It is the lateral area (which is 1/2 the perimeter multiplied by the slant height), plus the area of the base.
The lateral area [L] of a right prism with base perimeter [P] and height [h] is L=Ph.
SA = BA + 1/2 ps SA = BA + LA
SA = BA + ph and SA = BA + LA
Lateral Area=Perimeter of the base * height perimeter=20 height=6 so, Lateral Area=20 * 6 Lateral Area=120cm
SA = BA + ph SA = BA + LA because LA = ph (perimeter x height)
The lateral area [L] of a right prism with base perimeter [P] and height [h] is L=Ph.
Total surface area= 1/2 times the perimeter of the base times the slant height plus the area of the base Lateral surface area= 1/2 times the perimeter times the slant height
It is the lateral area (which is 1/2 the perimeter multiplied by the slant height), plus the area of the base.
The lateral area [L] of a right prism with base perimeter [P] and height [h] is L=Ph.
The lateral surface area, that is, the part curved in 3-dimensional space, is equal to the perimeter of one circular base multiplied by the height. The perimeter of a circle with radius 10 is 20(pi); therefore, the lateral area is 20(pi)16 = 6.0 X 102 to the justified number of significant digits.
SA = BA + 1/2 ps SA = BA + LA
SA = BA + ph and SA = BA + LA
Lateral Area= p times h p= perimeter of the base h=height of the figure Surface Area= Lateral Area + 2 times (B) B= Area of base
(1/2 B)h another way is Lateral area + base area. Lateral area is 1/2 perimeter*slant height. You use this if you dont know the height but know the slant. or if you just like to do it this way
The surface area is the area of the base plus the area of the slanted sides:SA = ba + lala = ps→SA = ba + ps