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find the perimeter when 80 triangles are put together in the pattern sh…

Question

find the perimeter when 80 triangles are put together in the pattern shown below. assume that all triangle sides are 1 cm long. the perimeter is □ cm.

Explanation:

Step1: Analyze the pattern

From the figure, when we have \( n \) triangles (assuming the pattern is a sequence of triangles forming a larger shape, likely a parallelogram - like structure with two triangles per "layer" or a pattern where the number of triangles is even, let's assume the number of triangles \( n \) is even. Let \( n = 2k \), where \( k \) is the number of pairs of triangles. For example, when \( n = 2 \) (2 triangles), the perimeter is \( 4 \) cm? Wait, no, let's look at the given figure. The figure shows 4 triangles (maybe? Wait, the problem says 80 triangles. Let's find the pattern.

Wait, let's consider the number of triangles: when we have \( n \) triangles (equilateral, side 1 cm) arranged in a pattern where they form a sort of parallelogram with two triangles per "column" or row. Wait, let's take small cases.

Case 1: 2 triangles (arranged to form a rhombus). Perimeter: 4 cm? Wait, no, two equilateral triangles with side 1 cm, joined along a side, form a rhombus with side 1 cm, perimeter \( 4\times1=4 \)? Wait, no, two equilateral triangles joined along a side: the shape has 4 sides? Wait, no, each triangle has 3 sides. When joined, the common side is internal. So for 2 triangles: total outer sides. Each triangle contributes 2 sides (since one side is shared). So \( 2\times2 + 2\times1 \)? Wait, maybe better to look at the number of triangles as \( n \), and find the perimeter formula.

Wait, the problem says 80 triangles. Let's assume the pattern is such that the number of triangles \( n \) is even, \( n = 2k \). Let's take \( k = 1 \) (2 triangles): perimeter? Let's draw it. Two equilateral triangles, base to base, forming a rhombus. Each side is 1 cm. The perimeter: top, bottom, left, right. Wait, no, the rhombus has 4 sides, each 1 cm, so perimeter 4. For \( k = 2 \) (4 triangles): arranged in two rows of two? Wait, the figure shows 4 triangles (maybe 4 triangles forming a larger parallelogram). Let's count the perimeter. For 4 triangles: let's see, the horizontal sides: top and bottom, each has 2 segments? Wait, no, maybe the formula is: when there are \( n \) triangles (even, \( n = 2k \)), the perimeter is \( 2 + 2k \)? Wait, no, let's check with \( n = 2 \): \( 2 + 2\times1 = 4 \), which matches. For \( n = 4 \): \( 2 + 2\times2 = 6 \)? Wait, no, maybe not. Wait, another approach: each triangle has side 1 cm. When we arrange them in a pattern where they form a shape with height (number of triangles vertically) and width. Wait, the figure shows a vertical stack? Wait, the figure has 4 triangles, arranged in two columns? Wait, maybe the number of triangles \( n \), and the perimeter is \( (n/2)+2 + (n/2)+2 \)? No, that would be \( n + 4 \), which doesn't make sense. Wait, let's look at the figure again. The figure is a parallelogram made of 4 equilateral triangles (two on top, two on bottom, or four in a 2x2 diamond shape). Wait, for 4 triangles, the perimeter: let's count the outer sides. Each side of the large parallelogram: the slant sides: 2 cm each? No, each small triangle has side 1 cm. Wait, maybe the pattern is that for \( n \) triangles (where \( n \) is even, \( n = 2k \)), the perimeter is \( 2 + 2k \) horizontal sides? No, maybe the formula is \( P = 2 + n/2 + 2 + n/2 \)? Wait, no, let's take \( n = 2 \): perimeter 4. \( n = 4 \): perimeter 6? Wait, no, if you have 4 triangles (arranged as two rows of two, forming a larger rhombus), the perimeter would be 6? Wait, no, each side of the larger rhombus would be 2 cm? No, the small triangles have side 1 cm. Wait, maybe I'm overcomplicating. Let'…

Answer:

82