If you mean a sector with an arc of 110 degrees and an area of 50 square units
Area of all the circle: 360/110 times 50 = 163.'63' square units
Radius of the circle is the square root of 163.'63'/pi = 7.2171377402
So the radius of the circle is about 7 units
6.46
if a circle has a radius of 12cm and a sector defined by a 120 degree arc what is the area of the sector
6.46
The area of a sector in a circle if the radius is 4 cm and the arc has degree 120 is: 16.76 cm2
The radius is 12
6.46
if a circle has a radius of 12cm and a sector defined by a 120 degree arc what is the area of the sector
6.46
The area of a sector in a circle if the radius is 4 cm and the arc has degree 120 is: 16.76 cm2
The radius is 12
its 45.33 :)..people just need to get straight to the freaking point!
For A+ it's 20
From your question, we can't tell whether [ 64 pi ] is the area of the circleor the sector.The area of a circle is [ pi R2 ].If [ 64 pi ] is the area of the circle, then the radius is [ 8 ], and we don't careabout the sector.If [ 64 pi ] is the area of the sector, then the area of the full circle is [ 256 pi ](because the 90-degree sector is 1/4 of the circle), and the radius is [ 16 ].
The area of the sector of the circle formed by the central angle is: 37.7 square units.
45.33
Not enough information is given to work out the radius of the circle as for instance what is the length of sector's arc in degrees
A 130-degree radius typically refers to a circular arc or sector with a central angle of 130 degrees. In this context, the radius is the distance from the center of the circle to any point on its circumference. This means that if you were to draw a circle with a radius of a specific length, the arc defined by a 130-degree angle would represent a portion of that circle, covering about one-third of its total circumference.