A circle. (or approximately a circle if you look closely the mountains and valleys that the cross section cuts through disturb the circle). a mathematical sphere will give a mathematical circle at all cross sections.
the earth is a bit flattened but the moon has a brilliant circle
All you need to do is draw a circle, and draw 3 astroids (hypocycloid with four cusps) on the right side of the circle. After that, write Steelers in the left side of the circle.
Get a pencil to draw this stuff. Okay, first draw a oval for the body and a circle for the head. Make a snout at the end of the circle, near the bottom. Then draw two triangles going into the circle. then make a smaller triangle inside of the triangles. Then come from the oval and make a tail shaped thing that is wide and long, remember to make the tail faced down! Then make make eight lines and connnect each pair at the bottom. Then make a half oval at the bottom of all the pairs. Then take a black marker or pen and out line it again. Go straight from the circle and then catch up to the oval. Then go around the wide and long tail, around the connected pairs and half circles and until you get back to the other part of where you begun. Then make the snout go into the head a little more. Then go from the top of the snout (that is inside the circle) and make a little oval from the top and to one inch after the half of the outline oval. take make. Then, a smaller circle and color the last little circle black. Make another oval circle circle black circle again. Outline the triangles and mini triangles inside. After you have outlined everything, add on claws on the bottom of the pairs of legs. Then erase all the pencil marks. Then color the fox in with a colored pencil that is red/orange. then color the oval circle black circle what ever color you want. Color the uncolored circle what ever color you want. I recommend blue and green or brown. Color the mini triangles light pink or a peach. Now, you've drawn a fox! Hope this helps! ~Triangle With Mini Triangle: Ears ~Oval With Circle And Black Circle: Eyes With Pupils ~Oval And Circle: Head and body ~Triangular Thing At End Of Head: Snout ~ Pairs of lines connected: Legs ~ Half Oval/Circle Things At Bottom Of Pairs Of Lines Connected: Paws ~ Lines on Oval/Circle: Claws
step 1- draw a circle at the top. step 2- draw a circle at the bottom. step 3-draw two circles at the left and right of the top and bottom circles. step 4-draw a black circle in the middle of all those circles. small tip- you're better to do those 4 circles in red or orange.
NO. All the radii of a circle are of exactly the same length. In fact, that is the definition of the locus of a point describing a circle.
A circle with a radius of 2.
All the radii of a circle are of equal length. The radius is the distance from the center of the circle to the out edge. Having equal radii is what defines a circle.
Yes, all of the radii in a single circle are congruent.
Yes, providing that the radii are all in the same circle
Yes. All radii of the same circle have the same length.
The center isn't the locus, and a point on the circumference isn't the locus.The whole circumference of the circle is the locus.It's the locus of all points that have the same distance from the center of the circle.
A circle is the locus of all points equidistant from a given point, which is the center of the circle, and a circle can be drawn with a compass. (The phrase "locus of points for a circle" does not seem to be conventionally defined.) or true
The plural of 'radius' is 'radii', not 'radiuses'. A circle has an infinite number of radii, but they are all of the same length.
Yes
Yes, all radii of a given circle have the same length. A circle is defined as all the points on a plane that have a specified distance from a given point, called the center. Any segment from the center to the circle is called a radius (plural radii). Thus, by definition, all such segments (all radii) have the same length.
All radii of a circle are equal and all chords are line segments.