If the radius is 42 meters, then you already know the radius.
The circumference of a circle is 15\piπ m. Find its radius, in meters. The Answer Should Be 7.5
It is: diameter/2 = 6 cm
circumference = 44 m radius = 44\2 (circumference\2) = 22m
The area of a circle is pi multiplied by radius squared. Thus, if the radius is 2.35m, the area is 17.3 square meters.
If A = 37 m2 then r = 3.43 m
The radius is 7 meters.
A=Pi(r)2 - A circle with a radius of 24 meters has an area of 1809.56 square meters.
The circumference of a circle is 15\piπ m. Find its radius, in meters. The Answer Should Be 7.5
150
Area of a circle in square meters = pi times radius squared
Circumference of circle: 2*pi*12 = 24*pi meters
It is: diameter/2 = 6 cm
circumference = 44 m radius = 44\2 (circumference\2) = 22m
The area of a circle is pi multiplied by radius squared. Thus, if the radius is 2.35m, the area is 17.3 square meters.
If A = 37 m2 then r = 3.43 m
pi*r2 = 400*pi Therefore radius = 20 meters Cicumference = 2*pi* radius = 40*pi meters
The process you would use to find the circumference of a circle completely depends on what information you already have about the circle. For example, you might be given the circle's area, or its radius, or its diameter, or the length of one radian of arc along the circumference, and each of those would require a different method to find the circumference. The easiest example is the one where you know the circle's diameter. In that case, simply multiply the diameter by (pi) to get the circumference. The next easiest case is the one where you have the circle's radius ... let's say the radius is 1.5 meters. Knowing that the radius is half of the diameter, you first double the radius, and find that the diameter 3.0 meters. Then you get the circumference just as you did in the first example ... multiply the diameter by (pi). With a radius of 1.5 meter, you would find that the circumference is about 9.425 meters. (rounded)