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Áreas

Áreas is the plural of área in Spanish and Portuguese, used to refer to regions, zones, or extents of space. In mathematics, area denotes the two‑dimensional size of a region on the plane, expressed in square units such as square meters or square kilometers. The concept is grounded in basic properties: non-negativity, additivity over disjoint regions, and monotonicity with respect to inclusion. In more formal terms, area is tied to measure theory, where the area of simple shapes aligns with the Lebesgue measure in the plane, and the idea extends to higher dimensions as volume.

Common shapes have standard formulas for their areas. Rectangle or parallelogram: A = base × height. Triangle:

Beyond mathematics, áre as is used in geography and planning to denote bounded portions of space, such

Overall, the term encompasses both quantitative measurements of space and qualitative designations of regions across disciplines.

A
=
1/2
×
base
×
height.
Circle:
A
=
πr^2,
where
r
is
the
radius.
Trapezoid:
A
=
(base1
+
base2)/2
×
height.
More
complex
figures
can
be
analyzed
by
decomposing
them
into
simpler
parts
or
by
integration.
In
calculus,
area
under
a
curve
y
=
f(x)
from
x
=
a
to
x
=
b
is
A
=
∫_a^b
f(x)
dx;
for
irregular
regions,
double
integrals
or
other
techniques
from
multivariable
calculus
are
used.
as
urban
areas,
rural
areas,
protected
areas,
or
administrative
districts.
These
areas
are
defined
by
legal
boundaries
or
natural
features
and
are
used
for
mapping,
statistics,
environmental
management,
and
governance.
In
education
and
research,
áre
as
may
also
refer
to
domains
of
study
or
departmental
divisions
within
institutions.