The question cannot be answered since the area of a garden does not define its perimeter.
The smallest perimeter for a 64 sq ft garden is 28.36 ft - when the garden is circular.
Consider a rectangle with length L feet where L ≥ 8 and width W = 64/L
Then the rectangle has an area of L*W = L*64/L = 64 sq feet.
Its perimeter is P = 2*(L+W) = 2*(L+64/L)
Now P can be increased by increasing L.
L = 8 ft gives P = 32 ft
L = 80 ft gives P = 161.6 ft
L = 800 ft gives P = 1600.16 ft
L = 8000 ft gives P = 16000.016 ft
and so on - without any limit.
The circumference of a rectangle is 2*(length+width), so 2*(18+23) = 2*(41) = 82 Therefore, 82 feet of fencing is required to enclose the garden.
How much fencing is required to enclose a circular garden with a radius of 14 meters? (Use 3.14 for π) _
176 m of fencing. Area of circle = 2*pi*radius
50 pi meters
As the rectangular garden is 10m wide, then two sides will require 10m of fencing. Thus 2*10 = 20m of fencing. It is also 15m long, so two sides will require 15m of fencing. Thus 2*15 = 30m of fencing. Adding up all 4 sides => 20+30 = 50m of fencing.
The circumference of a rectangle is 2*(length+width), so 2*(18+23) = 2*(41) = 82 Therefore, 82 feet of fencing is required to enclose the garden.
How much fencing is required to enclose a circular garden with a radius of 14 meters? (Use 3.14 for π) _
176 m of fencing. Area of circle = 2*pi*radius
Fencing needed: 2*pi*18 = just over 113 meters
839
I know, right? Where did Kim get all of that fencing anyway? I hope she's not trying to choose a garden size based on how much fencing she has. You can always buy more fencing if you have to. She should consider other factors like how much is she going to rely on this garden for food and how many plants it can support. Do you know what she's gonna plant this year? If you're looking to maximize your food per acreage, look into carrots, potatoes, and beets.
50 pi meters
As the rectangular garden is 10m wide, then two sides will require 10m of fencing. Thus 2*10 = 20m of fencing. It is also 15m long, so two sides will require 15m of fencing. Thus 2*15 = 30m of fencing. Adding up all 4 sides => 20+30 = 50m of fencing.
Perimeter is used when you want to find the length of the sides of an object. A practicle use for perimeter would be knowing how much fencing you need to enclose a certain amount of space, but the length of the fencing would be the perimeter.
The perimeter of a square is four times the length of one side. If each side is 10m, 40m of fencing would be required to enclose a pasture, less whatever is required for the gate.
its simple all needs 10,000 ft to enclose her garden
pi x diameter = 3.14 x 10 = 31.4 feet