The smallest is just over 40 units. At 40 units it is no longer a rectangle but a square. There is no largest perimeter.
There is no formula for a rectangle. There are formula for calculating its area, perimeter or length of diagonals from its sides, or it is possible to calculate the length of one pair of sides given the other sides and the area or perimeter, or the two lots of sides given area and perimeter and so on.
The smallest perimeter is 4*sqrt(24) = approx 19.6 cm There is no largest perimeter.
how do you find the area of a rectangle witha perimeter of 36 in You don't. You need more information For example a 1 x 17 rectangle has a perimeter of 36 and its area is 17. But a 2 x 16 rectangle also has a perimeter of 36 and its area is 32.
Yes, draw a 2 x 7 rectangle.
42.25 cm2
42 square units.
It's greatest possible perimeter: 1+39+1+39 = 80 feet
12.25 sq metres.
The greatest area for a fixed perimeter will be when all the sides are equal or when the rectangle approaches the shape of a square.
The greatest area that a rectangle can have is, in fact, attained when it is a square. A square with perimeter of 16 cm must have sides of 4 cm and so an area of 4*4 = 16 cm2.
The greatest area is 10000 square yards.
The square is.
The greatest possible area of a rectangle is simply the area of a square, which is a special type of rectangle.in order to find the area of that square:4s=96 (4s=4 sides)s=24A=lwA=24*24A=576so the area of that rectangle would be 576 ft...
This question has no unique answer. A (3 x 2) rectangle has a perimeter = 10, its area = 6 A (4 x 1) rectangle also has a perimeter = 10, but its area = 4 A (4.5 x 0.5) rectangle also has a perimeter = 10, but its area = 2.25. The greatest possible area for a rectangle with perimeter=10 occurs if the rectangle is a square, with all sides = 2.5. Then the area = 6.25. You can keep the same perimeter = 10 and make the area anything you want between zero and 6.25, by picking different lengths and widths, just as long as (length+width)=5.
90.25 ft2
There is no relationship between the perimeter and area of a rectangle. Knowing the perimeter, it's not possible to find the area. If you pick a number for the perimeter, there are an infinite number of rectangles with different areas that all have that perimeter. Knowing the area, it's not possible to find the perimeter. If you pick a number for the area, there are an infinite number of rectangles with different perimeters that all have that area.