Well, honey, the formula for the cross-sectional area of a coin is just π times the radius squared. So, measure that radius, square it, multiply by π, and voilà, you've got your cross-sectional area. Just don't go spending all that knowledge in one place, now.
To calculate the cross-sectional area of a shape, you need to determine the shape of the cross-section first (e.g., square, circle, triangle). Then, use the appropriate formula for that shape. For example, the formula for the cross-sectional area of a square is side length squared, for a circle it is pi times the radius squared, and for a triangle it is base times height divided by 2. Finally, plug in the given dimensions into the formula to calculate the cross-sectional area.
3*sqrt(3)/2*r^2
advantage of cross sectional study?
To derive the cross sectional area of a two liter bottle do the following formula. Area = (radius * 2.54 cm/in)^2 * pi = X cm^2.
R is the electrical resistance,A is the cross-sectional area,l is the length of the piece of material.
You cannot create a cross sectional area of a rectangle. You can only create cross sectional areas for triangular shapes.
If the bar is circular then it is: pi*radius square
the larger the cross sectional area, the smaller the resistance
If the wire has a circular cross-section - the usual case - use the formula for the circle: pi x radius squared.
R= ρL/A ρ- electrical resistivity of the materialL- length of the conductor.A- cross sectional area of the conductor.
Yes, We can design a cross sectional study which its data collected in a retrospective format, so this study is called cross sectional retrospective study.