Probably you meant to ask what is the lateral area of a hexagonal prism. In that case, it would be the perimeter of one of the bases times the height.
The question does not state that it is a regular hexagon and so you may not assume that it is. Therefore, there is no simple formula because a hexagon can have very many shapes. One method would be to pick a point in the plane of the hexagon and join it to all the vertices. This divides up the hexagon into triangles. Their areas can be calculated using base and height, or three sides, or two sides and included angle - whichever you like. Finally the areas of the triangles must be combined to get the area of the hexagon.
no, if you took a hexagon and squashed it down the inside angles would grow and the outside angles would shrink.
To calculate the perimeter of a hexagon with 16 cm sides, you would add up the length of all six sides. Since all sides are equal in a regular hexagon, the perimeter would be 6 multiplied by the length of one side. Therefore, the perimeter would be 6 x 16 cm = 96 cm.
The total sum of exterior angles of any polygon is 360 degrees. So if it is a regular hexagon it would have 6 exterior angles of 60 degrees.
Every hexagon has six sides. That is the definition of "hexagon".If it did not have six sides, then it would not be a 'hexagon', andwe would not be having this discussion.
Probably you meant to ask what is the lateral area of a hexagonal prism. In that case, it would be the perimeter of one of the bases times the height.
The question does not state that it is a regular hexagon and so you may not assume that it is. Therefore, there is no simple formula because a hexagon can have very many shapes. One method would be to pick a point in the plane of the hexagon and join it to all the vertices. This divides up the hexagon into triangles. Their areas can be calculated using base and height, or three sides, or two sides and included angle - whichever you like. Finally the areas of the triangles must be combined to get the area of the hexagon.
You would have to use a couple of formulas to do this. It would basically be 374.4 cm in area but first you would have to find the base and the height.
To answer this question one would need to know the rock's initial height and velocity.
that would be a hexagon
You cannot - unless it is a regular hexagon. And there is nothing in the question to suggest that you can assume it is a regular hexagon.
A stop sign is an octagon, not a hexagon. most Nuts & bolt heads are hexagons. The head of an Allen Wrench is a hexagon.
no, if you took a hexagon and squashed it down the inside angles would grow and the outside angles would shrink.
A regular hexagon folded in half would look like an isosceles trapezoid.
A regular hexagon's angle would be 120 degrees making the total degrees 720. If it's the degrees of one angle of an irregular hexagon there would be quite a range
If the particular hexagon is a regular hexagon, then every interior angle is obtuse. However, not every hexagon is regular. Any figure with 6 sides is technically a hexagon, so the answer would be no.