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Alphinaud decides he needs a new shed to replace the old one. His current shed is a

rectangular prism that measures 2 feet long by 3 feet wide by 6 feet high. He realizes he needs a shed with 240 cubic feet of storage.

Part A: Will he achieve his goal if he doubles each dimension? Why or why not?

Part B: If he wants to keep the height the same, what could the other dimensions be for
him to get the volume he wants?

2 Answers

4 votes
That other person is right
User Chenge
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4 votes

Answer:

Q. What is the total surface area of the triangular prism shown? ... Q. A rectangular brick has a length of 5 centimeters, a width of 9 centimeters and a height of 20 ... He needs to calculate the lateral surface area of the shed so he will know how much paint to buy. ... The box is 3.2 feet long, 2.1 feet wide, and 2.7 feet high.

Explanation:

User Olex Ponomarenko
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4.1k points