It should be an infinitesimally small fraction, since a circumference is a curve and the base of a parallelogram is a straight line.
No!
Since the area of the circle would be multiplied due to the circumference of the pathogenic therum,so you would multiply 54x2=108.Then multiply that by 54,which is the absolute value of the area of the parallelogram,so 54x108,is 5832,which you'd find the square root of,76.4. :)
Using 3.14 as Pi the area of circle is: 0
yes,like finding area of circle, the base of a cylinder, circumference of a circle.
Depends on what level of math you're on, the most simple of ways to explain is this: If you were to divide the circle into many pieces using the radius, let's say eight pieces. You then rearrange them into a parallelogram and each base is half of the circumference. The height of it is the radius, and using the method to find a parallelogram, BxH=A.
The base of a cylinder is a circle. So we can use the area formula for a circle. Area = πr2 where r is the radius of the circle, and pi is the ratio of the circumference of the circle to its diameter.
Area circle: π × radius² Area triangle: ½ × base × height Area Parallelogram: base × height Area: Rectangle: length × width In a triangle, the base is any side between two vertices and the height is the perpendicular distance from this side to the third vertex. In a parallelogram the base is any side. The height is the perpendicular distance between this side and the side parallel to it.
I am going to assume you have a cylindrical tank. The base of a cylindical tank is a circle. The circumference of a circle is 2*Pi*r or Pi*d. So, the circumference of your tank would be Pi*12 ~= 37.7'
The base of a parallelogram is parallel to its opposite side.
The circumference of a circle = 2π r = π a (where a is the base of the semicircle and is also the diameter of the circle) The perimeter of the semicircle = half the perimeter of the circle + the base length The perimeter of the semicircle = πa/2 + a = a(1 + π /2) feet
Rectangle Area of parallelogram = Base * Height Area of rectangle = Base * Height
The area of a circle is equal to that of a triangle whose base has the length of the circle's circumference (distance around the circle) and whose height equals the circle's radius which comes to Pi multiplied by the radius squared. Area of Triangle 1/2 *base*height