ALL questions below regarding PAINTING A BEDROOM must be answered. Show ALL step-by-step calculations, round all of your final answers correctly, and include the units of measurement. For full credit all explanations must be given in the spaces provided. Upload this modified Answer Form to the Intellipath Unit 2 Submission lesson. Make sure you submit your work in a modified MS Word document; scanned/handwritten work will not be accepted.NAME: MATH125: Unit 2 Submission Assignment Answer Form Mathematical Modeling and Problem Solving ALL questions below regarding PAINTING A BEDROOM must be answered. Show ALL step-by-step calculations, round all of your final answers correctly, and include the units of measurement. For full credit all explanations must be given in the spaces provided. Upload this modified Answer Form to the Intellipath Unit 2 Submission lesson. Make sure you submit your work in a modified MS Word document; scanned/handwritten work will not be accepted. If you need assistance, please contact your course instructor. All commonly used formulas for geometric objects are really mathematical models of the characteristics of physical objects. For example, a basketball, because it is approximately a sphere, can be partially modeled by its distance from one side through the center (radius, r) and then to the other side by the diameter formula for a sphere: D = 2r. For familiar two-dimensional variables length, L, and width, W, the perimeter and area formulas for a rectangle are mathematical models for distance around the rectangle (perimeter, P) and the region enclosed by the sides (area, A), respectively: P = 2L + 2W and A = L x W Along with another variable, height, H, a three-dimensional rectangular prism’s volume and surface area can be measured. For example,