You can
Make a horizontal line and vertical line through the circle. You now have 4 parts. Make a line from the center to the edge of the circle in 3 of these parts and you now have 7 parts.
Technically no because 360/7 is a repeating decimal but it can be approximated
No, 24 is not a multiple of 7. 7 does not divide equally into it.
Well, honey, to divide a rectangle into 7 equal parts, you can start by drawing three equally spaced horizontal lines and three equally spaced vertical lines inside the rectangle. This will give you 9 smaller rectangles. Then, you can simply combine two of these smaller rectangles to create 7 equal parts. Voila! Just like that, you've divided that rectangle into 7 equal parts.
No it is not. 7 does not divide equally into 132.
1, 3, 7, 21.
By circling the diameter to 1300 cm and then cutting them in half and again to divide the equamatric. Its all in the way you look at it. Its REALLY simple.
7
28 can be split equally into: 2 equal parts of 14 each 4 equal parts of 7 each 7 equal parts of 4 each 14 equal parts of 2 each
A circular sector is formed by two radii and an arc. And the angle formed due to the two radii is central angle(Θ). Area of a sector = (Θ/360) πr2.If we divide a circle into seven sectors having equal central angles then the circle is divided into seven equal parts.Angle of the whole circle is 360o. So we should divide the whole angle into 7 equal parts each measuring 360o/7 and then forming the corresponding sectors.
Might be divide it to rectangle
The number that can divide equally with 7, 9, and 3 is their least common multiple (LCM), which is the smallest multiple that all three numbers share. To find the LCM of 7, 9, and 3, you first need to find the prime factorization of each number: 7 = 7, 9 = 3 x 3, and 3 = 3. Then, you take the highest power of each prime factor that appears in any of the factorizations: 7 x 3 x 3 = 63. Therefore, 63 is the number that can divide equally with 7, 9, and 3.