Thursday, July 5, 2007

If you double the lengths of each of the sides of a triangle, what happens to the perimeter and the area?

When you comment on this question, use numbers to actually prove your answer.

8 comments:

Alan X. Liu said...
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Alan X. Liu said...

the new perimeter will be doulbed of the original one and the new area will be four times the original one.(from Alan)

Anonymous said...

I HAVE to agree with alan cause one we disscussed this in class today and for ex.
I take a right triangle the sides are 2-3-4 double the current perimeter 2+3+4=9x2=18=perimeter now current area=3x2=6/2=3
area now=6x4=24/2=12
4x3=12 so the area is right too

Unknown said...

The perimeter will be doubled and the area will be 4 x the amount of the old 1. we talked about it in class.

Unknown said...

3 4 5 triangle

P = B + H + L

3 + 4 + 5 = 12
6 + 8 + 10= 24

A = B x H/2

3 x 4 = 12
6 x 8 = 48

Anonymous said...

The new perimeter will be double the original..... and the area will be multiplied by four. We did this in class ^_^

Mr. J. Sorocco said...
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Mr. J. Sorocco said...

Excellent work. I am glad we were able to prove what Xiao Wei stated in his original comment.