Ask Question
13 February, 08:28

If all three dimensions of a rectangular prism are quadrupled, then how will the new surface area compare to the old surface area? Write your answer as the ratio of two whole numbers separated by a colon; for example, "2:3".

+1
Answers (1)
  1. 13 February, 08:53
    0
    Let the initial width, depth and height of the prism be w, d, and h respectively.

    surface area of a rectangular prism is 2 (w * d + w * h + d * h).

    After quadrupling the dimentions, new dimentions is 4w, 4d and 4h.

    New surface area is 2 (4w * 4d + 4w * 4h + 4d * 4h) = 2 (16 * w * d + 16 * w * h + 16 * d * h) = 16 * 2 (w * d + w * h + d * h)

    Ratio of old surface area to new surface area is 2 (w * d + w * h + d * h) : 16 * 2 (w * d + w * h + d * h) = 1 : 16
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question 👍 “If all three dimensions of a rectangular prism are quadrupled, then how will the new surface area compare to the old surface area? Write ...” in 📗 Mathematics if the answers seem to be not correct or there’s no answer. Try a smart search to find answers to similar questions.
Search for Other Answers