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 choice of the base of a parallelogram does change the area because the base is always the bottom line of parallelogram.