it is not possible as i recall
-- Draw a circle. -- Put a mark at the center, and draw a line across the whole circle through the center. -- Measure the length of the curved line all around the circle. (called the "circumference" of the circle) -- Measure the length of the straight line across the circle. (called the "diameter" of the circle) If you divide the circumference by the diameter, the result is 'pi'. It doesn't matter how big or how small the circle is. The result is always the same.
When you draw a circle in math, and you draw a triangle inside of it, 2 of the lines should be the radius of the circle, and the third (bottom) line that is not the radius is the chord.
The radius is half the diameter. Draw a line that passes through the centre of the circle and measure it. This is the diameter. Halve it and you will have the radius.
Yes, you can draw a circle with a diameter of 6 cm.
Draw a line from any part on the outside of a circle to the exact center of the circle. * * * * * That is fine if you know where the center is but not much use if you are just given a circle and do not know where the exact centre is. In this case: Draw a chord - a straight line joining any two points on the circumference of the circle. Then draw the perpendicular bisector of the chord. Draw another chord and its perpendicular bisector. The two perpendicular bisectors will meet at the centre.
The longest chord of any circle is one that passes through the center; it's the diameter of the circle. And it's that simple. Draw any diameter, which is a segment through the center of a circle, and you have the longest chord.The longest chord in a circle is its diameter
There are an infinite number of possible chords in anycircle, regardless of its diameter. A chord is a line segment with its endpoints on the curve (circumference) of the circle. You can draw those all day and never draw the same one twice.
First draw a circle using a compass. Now, use a piece of string to help measure the circumference of the circle. Now measure the diameter of the circle. To discover Pi divide the circumference by the diameter.
A chord of a circle is a line segment drawn from any point on the curcumference of the circle to any other point on the circumference of the circle. The chord may pass through the center of the circle, in which case it is the diameter of the circle. The length of the chord will less than or equal to the diameter of the circle but greater than zero. If you draw a circle and start drawing chords, you'll quickly discover that there are an infinite number of unique chords that can be drawn in that circle. A link can be found below, and you can gather more information with the "click" of your mouse.
-- Draw a circle. -- Put a mark at the center, and draw a line across the whole circle through the center. -- Measure the length of the curved line all around the circle. (called the "circumference" of the circle) -- Measure the length of the straight line across the circle. (called the "diameter" of the circle) If you divide the circumference by the diameter, the result is 'pi'. It doesn't matter how big or how small the circle is. The result is always the same.
Test III. Draw the following inside the box in your intermediate paper. Use only one circle. 4. diameter XZ circle P secant MQ radius PM tangent YR chord XY
When you draw a circle in math, and you draw a triangle inside of it, 2 of the lines should be the radius of the circle, and the third (bottom) line that is not the radius is the chord.
The radius is half the diameter. Draw a line that passes through the centre of the circle and measure it. This is the diameter. Halve it and you will have the radius.
Take any circle and draw a straight line through it anywhere so that the line intersects the circle at two distinct points. The segment between the two points on the circle is the chord. A diameter, that is, a line segment through the center, could be a chord. But any shorter segment drawn through the circle and intersecting the circle at those two distinct points is a chord. It's just that simple. Need a link? You'll find one below.
When you draw a circle, and draw a triangle within it. Two of the lines of the circle should be the radius, and the third bottom line will be the chord. The segment of a circle is the area between the chord and the arc length.
Draw a line from any part on the outside of a circle to the exact center of the circle. * * * * * That is fine if you know where the center is but not much use if you are just given a circle and do not know where the exact centre is. In this case: Draw a chord - a straight line joining any two points on the circumference of the circle. Then draw the perpendicular bisector of the chord. Draw another chord and its perpendicular bisector. The two perpendicular bisectors will meet at the centre.
Yes, you can draw a circle with a diameter of 6 cm.