-- I give you a circle, a compass, a straight edge, and a pencil.
-- Your job: Construct a square that has the same area as the circle I gave you.
In 1882, it was mathematically proven to be impossible.
Morbus Cyclometricus
The "correct" unit will depend on the order of magnitude of the circle that you are trying to measure. If drawn on a page, the radius is likely to be measured in inches or centimetres. In this case, the area should be given in square inches or square centimetres. But you may want more precision and measure the radius in millimetres and then the area should be in square millimetres. A circle drawn in a field may be measured in feet, yard or metres and its area would then be in square feet, sq yards or sq metres. The radius of the effective reach of a radio beacon may be measured in miles or kilometres and the area would then be in sq miles or sq km.
Well, it depends on the area of the shape you are trying to find, if its: square: length times width triangle: base times height divided by 2 circle: 3.14 times radius squared trapezoid: base 1 plus base 2 times height divided by 2 A U shaped figure is probably half of a circle and a rectangle. The diameter of the circle is the same as the width of the rectangle.
You would use square inches if you were trying to measure the area of a 2D shape.
A square might be what you are trying to suggest.
they were trying to construct a square that perfectly circumscribes (surrounds) a given circle.
Some people became mentally deranged when trying to "square the circle". What was this illness named?
It is the challenge of constructing a square with the same area as a given circle by using only a finite number of steps with compass and straightedge. As pi (π) is a transcendental, rather than an algebraic irrational number, it cannot be done.
Morbus Cyclometricus
the illness was called Marbus Cyclometricus
construct a square that perfectly circumscribes (surrounds) a given square * * * * * What? The same square will do it - perfectly! It is, in fact, the challenge of constructing a square with the same area as a given circle by using only a finite number of steps with compass and straightedge. As pi (π) is a transcendental, rather than an algebraic irrational number, it cannot be done.
That's a question people have been trying to answer for centuries.
its called sex bro get out of math and get some
The Vicious Circle or What Are We Trying to Do - 1964 was released on: USA: 1964
when trying to find squ. feet you have to find the area. the area of a circle is half of the diameter squared times pi half of the diamter is the radius therefore the area in squ. ft would be.. A = pi x r2
Ptolemy is trying to explain in his model that each circle represents 1 planet's rotation and it's a scale drawing of the distance apart from each one!
that means that they are trying to scare away their enemy.