yes that's absoloutly correct
yes
36, area is equal to length X width, perimeter is equal to 2(length)+2(width) in a square length is equal to width, so we take the square root of the area to find that both are 9, which means the perimeter is 9 X 4, 36.
The square of the length of the base plus the square of the length of the height will equal the square of the length of the hypotenuse of your right triangle, per Pythagoras. Square the hypotenuse, subtract the square of the height, and then find the positive square root of that and you'll have the base of your right triangle.
The inverse of a 2x2 matrix:[a b][c d]is given by__1___[d -b]ad - bc [-c a]ad - bc is the determinant of the matrix; if this is 0 the matrix has no inverse.The inverse of a 2x2 matrix is also a 2x2 matrix.The browser used here is not really suitable to give details of the inverse of a general matrix.Non-singular square matrices have inverses and they can always be found. Singular, or non-square matrices do not have a proper inverses but canonical inverses for these do exist.
Squares have 4 equal sides. So lets set x equal to one of the sides of the square. x = one side of the square The perimeter of a square is the distance around the outside. This is equal to the sum of the lengths of the sides. Because a square has 4 sides the perimeter is as follows 4x = perimeter Solving for x in this case gives you 7. The area of any rectangle is equal to the base * height. In a square this means side * side or side2. area = x2 Solving for the area in the case given we find that the area of a square with a perimeter of 28 is equal to 49 units2
Matrices have a wider application in engineering. Many problems can be transformed in to simultaneous equation and their solution can easily be find with the help of matrices.
The length of the square is equal to its width, because in a square all sides are equal.
Yes, -1.
just make the matrices upper triangular by making the values below the digonal zero,and then find how many minors can be calcuted.......
find the square root.
Make the segment into a square, find the area of the square, then find the square root of the area because the square root is equal to the side length
a square is a 2 dimension object. we can not find volume of a 2-D object... if u are asking that of a cube with equal sides, then simply find (a^3) where a is side of the cube.
find the width of a rectangle if its area is 9/28 of a square foot
matrix
using calculator , it will be equal to11.44
Neither; the sums are equal.
Guess and check to find two numbers that equal 45.