$4.25 • 6= $25.5
$255-$25.5= $229.5
$229.5/$4.25= 54 boxes of cookies
Because otherwise the two circles you build wouldn't have any intersection!
You have to draw two circles, centered at the endpoints of the segment, and connect their intersection.
If the radii are less than half the length of the circle, the circles will have no interserction.
Yes, it is also a square number
Answer:
The perimeter (to the nearest integer) is 9.
Step-by-step explanation:
The upper half of this figure is a triangle with height 3 and base 6. If we divide this vertically we get two congruent triangles of height 3 and base 3. Using the Pythagorean Theorem we find the length of the diagonal of one of these small triangles: (diagonal)^2 = 3^2 + 3^2, or (diagonal)^2 = 2*3^2.
Therefore the diagonal length is (diagonal) = 3√2, and thus the total length of the uppermost two sides of this figure is 6√2.
The lower half of the figure has the shape of a trapezoid. Its base is 4. Both to the left and to the right of the vertical centerline of this trapezoid is a triangle of base 1 and height 3; we need to find the length of the diagonal of one such triangle. Using the Pythagorean Theorem, we get
(diagonal)^2 = 1^2 + 3^2, or 1 + 9, or 10. Thus, the length of each diagonal is √10, and so two diagonals comes to 2√10.
Then the perimeter consists of the sum 2√10 + 4 + 6√2.
which, when done on a calculator, comes to 9.48. We must round this off to the nearest whole number, obtaining the final result 9.
Answer:
6
Step-by-step explanation:
5+
/4-2
= 2 x 2 x 2 (12)
5+ 12 / 4-2
5 + 3 - 2
6