L = P/2 - W.
Let P be perimeter, A is area, L is length, and W is width.A = L x W, P = 2L + 2W; you know P and W, so L = (P - 2W)/2and A = W x (P - 2W)/2
P/L% = P/L * 100 divide by C.P
If we're talking Width, Length and Perimeter then W = P/2 - L
Any number greater than or equal to 4*sqrt(48) = 27.71 cm (approx). Let the length, L, be any number greater than sqrt(48) = 6.93 cm (approx) and let W = 48/L cm. Then Area = L*W = L*48/L = 48 cm2 But since L can have an infinite number of values, so can the perimeter. For example, L = 48, W = 1, A = 48 and P = 98 L = 96, W = 0.5, A = 48 and P = 193 L = 480, W = 0.1, A = 48 and P = 960.2 L = 960, W = 0.05, A = 1 and P = 1920.1 L = 4800, W = .01, A = 48 and P = 9600.02 there is no limit to the size of P.
The speed of seismic waves from fastest to slowest is P waves (primary waves), S waves (secondary waves), and then surface waves. L waves are a type of surface wave, so they are generally slower than both P and S waves.
Primary waves (P-waves) are the fastest seismic waves and are the first to be detected after an earthquake. They are able to travel through solid rock, liquid, and gas, making them the fastest seismic waves.
Primary waves as they travel like a worm, compressing and then expanding
no, p waves are the fastest followed by s waves and finally surface waves
P or Primary waves are the fastest earthquake or seismic waves.
P-waves.
No, they are in fact the slowest! The fastest seismic waves are P-waves.
P-waves, also known as primary waves, move the fastest among seismic waves. They are able to travel through solid and liquid materials, making them the first to be detected during an earthquake.
No, P and S waves travel faster than surface waves. P waves are the fastest seismic waves, followed by S waves, with surface waves being the slowest. Surface waves are responsible for most of the damage caused by earthquakes due to their amplitude and duration.
Primary (P) waves are the fastest seismic waves and are the first to be recorded by seismographs. They are compressional waves that travel through the Earth's interior.
The fastest type of seismic wave is the Primary or P-wave, which can travel through solid rock, as well as liquids and gases. P-waves are compressional waves that move in a push-pull motion. They are the first waves detected by seismographs during an earthquake.
The 3 seizmic waves are primary or P-wave, secondary or S-wave and surface or L-wave. P-waves expand and compress material. Particles around the wave vibrate and the P-wave is the fastest wave out of the 3. S-waves travel through the ground perpendicular to the forward motion. these waves are slower than P-waves and these waves travel through solids only! L-waves are the most desructive wave. once you know where this guy hits you know where the epicenter of an earthquake is. L-waves are the combination of P- and S-waves.