121
... center of the circle.
no,three points can be non collinear
The circumference of every circle is (pi) x (diameter).The circumference of this particular circle is 30 pi.
By definition Pi is the relation between the radius and circumference of a circle.
Every circle by definition has 360 degrees. If it did not have 360 degrees, it would not be a circle. Therefore, 16 degrees of a circle is 16o over 360o.
Yes, and the two points are located on the circumference of the circle
well its true that every chord contains two points of the circumference of a circle 'cos a chord is the straight line between two points on the circumference
That point is known as the "center of the circle". Every circle has one.
Every set of three points is Concyclic !
twenty
The points are all the same distance from the center of the circle. The distance between the center and any point is the radius of the circle.
The 1st dot will need 14 lines.The 2nd will need 13 since we have already joined the 1st to the 2nd.The 3rd will need 12.The 4th will need 11.etc etc14 + 13 + 12 + 11 + 10 + 9 + 8 + 7 + 6 + 5 + 4 + 3 + 2 + 1 = 105 lines.
All points in a plane that are equidistant from a given point form a circle. The center of the circle is the given point, and the radius is the constant distance from the center to any point on the circle. Thus, every point on this circle maintains the same distance from the center point.
Every meridian of longitude is a semi-circle that joins the north and south poles.
A circle has infinitely many points of symmetry. Every straight line that passes through the center of a circle is a line of symmetry.
Every so-called "great circle" is (more or less) the longest circumference of the Earth that includes any two points. The great circle includes the shortest distance between the two points for travel along the Earth's surface.
Because from every point on the rainbow, the angle between the direction to thesun and the direction to your eye has to be the same angle. The only collectionof points that can do that is all the points on a circle.