Asked by Jen
The total surface area of a rectangular solid is the sum of the areas of the six faces. If each dimension of a given rectangular solid is doubled, what effect does this have on the total surface area?
Answers
Answered by
Steve
if the dimensions are scaled by a factor of f, then the area grows by a factor of f^2
This is easy to see, since
area = length * width
if each is doubled, then the
newarea = (2*length)*(2*width) = 2^2 * (length*width) = 2^2 * area
This is easy to see, since
area = length * width
if each is doubled, then the
newarea = (2*length)*(2*width) = 2^2 * (length*width) = 2^2 * area
Answered by
Jen
unknown
Answered by
Jen
Thanks much!
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