The Length of a Side of a regular Hexagon calculator computes the length of all of the sides (s) of a regular Hexagon based on the area (A). A regular hexagon Regular Hexagon is a six sided polygon where all of the sides are the same length (s) and all interior angles are the same.
INSTRUCTIONS: Choose units and enter the following:
Side Length (s): The calculator returns the length of the hexagon sides in meters. However, this can be automatically converted to other units via the pull-down menu.
The formula for the length of a side of a regular hexagon from the area is:
`s = sqrt(A * 2/(3sqrt(3))`
where:
A hexagon is a polygon with six sides and six angles. It is a two-dimensional geometric shape formed by connecting six straight line segments (sides) in a closed loop. Each interior angle of a regular hexagon (where all sides and angles are equal) measures 120 degrees. The sum of the interior angles in any hexagon is 720 degrees.
Hexagons are encountered in various natural and man-made contexts. In nature, honeycombs constructed by bees often exhibit a hexagonal pattern because it is an efficient way to fill space with the least amount of material. In geometry and design, hexagons are commonly used in patterns, tiling, and architectural structures. They also appear in everyday objects, such as nuts and bolts, and are widely used in fields like science, engineering, and mathematics.
Giant's Causeway's hexagons: Using this equation and the fact that the shoe in the picture is approximately 12" long and that the side of the hexagon is approximately the length of the shoe, the AREA of these regular hexagons is 2.5 ft2.
Hexagons were also used by NASA in the James Webb Space Telescope.
Image provide by: Bobarino - Own work based on: File:JWST-HST-primary-mirrors.jpg a NASA public domain image, CC BY-SA 3.0
The side of each JWST is approximately 0.737 meters. Use the sum of hexagon areas (CLICK HERE) to compute the total area of the 18 hexagon mirrors. The primary mirror of the Hubble Space Telescope is 2.4 meters in diameter. Use the area of a circle calculator (CLICK HERE) to compute the area of the Hubble Space Telescope primary mirror.