The diameter is twice as long as the radius.
d = 2r
The diameter is basically a line through the center of a circle while a radius is from the center to the circumference of a circle.
No, only if the diameter is bigger than the radius is the radius smaller than the diameter.
The radius would be 6 cm because the diameter is 2 times bigger than the radius.
Diameter of circle = 2 * Radius of the circle.
Since diameter is twice its radius, the radius of this circle would be 60
The radius (radii) of a circle is 1/2 of the diameter. The radius of a circle with a 6.2 cm diameter is 3.1 cm.
No, only if the diameter is bigger than the radius is the radius smaller than the diameter.
A circle's radius is always smaller than both its diameter and its circumference.
Yes. The radius is one-half of the diameter.
They are both the same
The diameter is twice the radius. Or The Radius is half the diameter. Algebraically, d = 2r or r = d/2
The radius would be 6 cm because the diameter is 2 times bigger than the radius.
The radius of a circle is half the diameter so if the radius of a circle is r, then the diameter is 2r.
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).
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.
The radius of a circle is half the diameter, so the radius of a 6 inch diameter circle is 3 in.
if you double the radius (or diameter) , you get four times the area. area of a circle = pi * radius squared