The radius becomes one and a half times larger
When you triple the radius of the circle . . . -- The diameter also triples. -- The circumference also triples. -- The area is multiplied by 9 .
It will result to the circle's radius.
Radius is half of diameter so it increases by 2.
If the radius of a circle doubles, the circumference doubles, and so does the diameter.
The circumference of a circle increases with an increase in the radius as it is directly proportional its radius.
The radius is also reduced by half
The diameter is twice the radius. Or The Radius is half the diameter. Algebraically, d = 2r or r = d/2
The radius of a circle is half the diameter so if the radius of a circle is r, then the diameter is 2r.
The radius of a circle is always half of the diameter. If the diameter is 85.4, the radius is 42.7.
The radius of a circle is half of the diameter, so the radius of a circle with a diameter of 14in is 7in.
Irrespective of the units of length, be they Metric, or Imperial , the diameter is twice the radius. Algebraically written as d = 2r o r ( d = r + r).
Nothing - if you double the radius you will get the diameter. The area of the circle will remain the same