take off the circle at the bottom, and mold it into a square.
The center of the circle is at (0, 0) and its radius is the square root of 1 which is 1
Diameter of circle: 2 times square root (78.5/pi) = 10 units rounded up
square root of (2 ) square root of (3 ) square root of (5 ) square root of (6 ) square root of (7 ) square root of (8 ) square root of (9 ) square root of (10 ) " e " " pi "
square root 2 times square root 3 times square root 8
A circle is not a number, it is a 2-dimensional shape. A number can have a square root, not a shape. So, a circle cannot have a square root!.
Half the square root of the square radius equals the circle radius.
Area of circle: 18pi Radius of circle: square root of 18 = 3 times square root of 2 Using Pythagoras' theorem each side of the square is 6 units in length
The diameter of the circle is equal to the diagonal of the square, or the (side of the square) times the (square root of 2).
You take square roots from numbers, not from geometric figures.
Radius of circle: square root of (64/pi) = 4.5135166683 feet
The largest diameter you can inscribe in a circle is a square. The square's diagonal is equal to the diameter of the circle; the length of the side of the square is therefore equal to the circle's diameter, divided by the square root of 2.
Well, since the circle is inside the square, the edges of the square define the limits of the circle. Since we have a square, the length of each side is the square root of 800ft. The radius of the circle is half the length of the sides. Therefore, the answer is half of (the square root of 800), which makes for an ugly radius value of "14.142135623730950488016887242097" ft
Figure out the square root
It is the square root of (12/pi) feet
the square root of 7
Yes.