A Guide to the GRE/Squares

From Wikibooks, open books for an open world
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Squares[edit | edit source]

The area of a square equals its side squared.

Area = s2

The diagonal of a square equals its side multiplied by

This comes from the Pythagorean theorem. The diagonal is the greatest distance between any two points on the square.

Practice[edit | edit source]

1. The diagonal of a square is equal to 5. What is the length of a side of the square?

2. Square A has 3 times the size of Square B. If Square B's side has a length of 10, what is the length of a side of Square A?


Answers to Practice Questions[edit | edit source]

1.

The diagonal of a square is equal tomultiplied by its side; thus, the side of a square is equal to its diagonal divided by, or multiplied by In the case of this particular square, this means that the diagonal is equal to

2.

The area of a square is its side squared. Thus if a2 = 3b2 then a must equalSince the length of one side of the latter square is 10, the first square's side must equal