9514 1404 393
Explanation:
Divide the figure into areas for which you have a surface area formula. Use the appropriate formula for each area, then add up the results.
Formulas are available for surface areas of a cone, cylinder, sphere, pyramid, rectangular prism, and for plane shapes that are circles, ellipses, triangles, rectangles, trapezoids, and regular polygons.
Most of the figures for which you are asked to find the area will decompose to some subset of these shapes. Take care to identify the relevant dimensions of each of the constituent parts of the area, and to make sure that all parts are accounted for. Do not allow your parts of the area to overlap, unless you intend to account for that overlap by subtracting the area that is counted more than once.
Also, use your common sense. A semicircle will have half the area of a circle, for example.
In some cases, it may be expedient to compute the area of a larger figure than the one you have, then subtract the part of that area that is missing from your figure.
Newton's law of motion has three parts. The second of which states that the force needed to move an object is directly proportional to the acceleration of the motion. The proportion can be written as,
F = ka
where k is the constant of proportionality. This can be substituted with the mass of the object such that the equation would become.
F = ma
where F is force, m is mass, and a is acceleration.
11x=1
x= 1/11 (divide 11 on both side)
Practice is key in mathematics! Always search up the topic and re-read the lessons with some practice problems to see if you got it. Asking your teacher and peers to help is another way to go.
Remember, your teacher had to learn this in order to teach you about it!