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12 answers

Um... That would be a rectangle, not a square. (A square has equal sides, so it can't have those dimensions.)

Anyway, the area of a rectangle is (Length x width)
= √3 x √11
= √(3x11)
= √33

If you're talking about two different squares... one with side length √3 and the other with side length √11, then the areas would be

√3 x √3 = 3
and
√11 x √11 = 11

2007-05-04 03:39:25 · answer #1 · answered by Mathematica 7 · 0 0

Find the area of a square with dimensions: √3 and √11?

"dimensions √3 and √11"?
"dimensions" = length of its sides?

square = rectangle with all sides of equal length
rectangle = parallelogram with 4 right angles
parallelogram = a four-sided two-dimensional figure with opposite sides parallel.

If it's a square, it has the same dimensions on all sides. The area of any rectangular object (including a square) is equal to the product of the lengths of two adjacent sides.

If you are talking about two squares, one with the dimensions √3 and the other with dimensions √11 then
The area of the first would be √3 √3 = 3
You can figure out the area of the other using the same method.

If you are talking about a rectangle with one side √3 and the other √11, the area would be √3 √11 = √33.

There is one other alternative. By "dimension" you might mean the "diagonal."

By Pythagoras, we know that the length of the diagonal = the sum of the squares of the other two sides. a² + b² = c²
Since, in the case of a square, a = b you have 2a² = c², or
c = a√2.
If we're talking diagonals, you have given
c = √3
So, √3 = a√2
Multiply both sides by 1/√2 and you get
√3/√2 = a
The area is a², so (√3/√2)² = 3/2

You can do the other one.

2007-05-04 04:08:34 · answer #2 · answered by gugliamo00 7 · 0 0

area of the square with a side√3=3
area of the square with a side√11=11

2007-05-04 03:51:02 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

8 x 11 = 88

2016-05-20 04:00:39 · answer #4 · answered by ayesha 3 · 0 0

3 and 11 ?

2007-05-04 03:38:16 · answer #5 · answered by scientific_boy3434 5 · 0 2

The area is √33.

2007-05-04 03:38:48 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

/// step by step solution & logic, too!

a square has sides which are equal, so the above consists of two questions.

the area of a square is the "square" of the dimensions of any one of its four sides.

to "square" any number, multiply that number by itself.

the "square root" of a number is another number which has to be multiplied by itself to obtain the number; therefore, the square of the square root of any number is the number itself.

Hence, the two answers are "3" and "11"

2007-05-04 03:46:14 · answer #7 · answered by Roger S 7 · 0 0

Um, that is not a square.

A rectangle with those dimensions would have area √33, by simple multiplication.

2007-05-04 03:38:59 · answer #8 · answered by joncummins1968 4 · 1 0

It's not a square, it could be a rectangle.
L * W = sqrt(33)

2007-05-04 03:57:31 · answer #9 · answered by Baysoc23 5 · 0 0

How can a square have different lengths for its sides?

2007-05-04 03:38:54 · answer #10 · answered by thegubmint 7 · 2 0

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