Base X Height - pi(r)^2
It depends on what the shaded and non-shaded parts look like!
0. There is no circle so no shaded area of a circle!
Rectangle Area of parallelogram = Base * Height Area of rectangle = Base * Height
The answer will depend on what part of the circle is shaded.Yes, that's sorta true. I think you are asking on how to find the area of a sector in a circle. If so, here's the formula: A= N/360 (πr^2)or akaArea of shaded area equal to the measurement of the central angle divided by 360 times pi to the second power.:)Just an EXAMPLE. A = 196/360 (π16^2)
The area formula for the parallelogram is related to the area formula for a rectangle because you can make the parallelogram into a rectangle to find the area.
It depends on what the shaded and non-shaded parts look like!
Depends on which part is shaded.
That depends what kind of figure you are talking about. The formula for the area of a circle is quite different from the area of a rectangle, for example.That depends what kind of figure you are talking about. The formula for the area of a circle is quite different from the area of a rectangle, for example.That depends what kind of figure you are talking about. The formula for the area of a circle is quite different from the area of a rectangle, for example.That depends what kind of figure you are talking about. The formula for the area of a circle is quite different from the area of a rectangle, for example.
0. There is no circle so no shaded area of a circle!
The area of the shaded region can be gotten by multiplying the area of the circle by the subtended angle of the sector.
Rectangle Area of parallelogram = Base * Height Area of rectangle = Base * Height
A circle with a radius of 135 units has an area of 57,255.53 square units.
Typically, when a mathematical problem wants you to find the value of a shaded area, it wants you to calculate the area. If the shaded area is a circle, the area can be found by multiplying pi by the square of the radius. If the shape is a triangle, the area is base times height, divided by 2. If the shape is a square or rectangle, the area is length times width.
(Length of side of square)^2 - Pi * radius^2
The answer will depend on what part of the circle is shaded.Yes, that's sorta true. I think you are asking on how to find the area of a sector in a circle. If so, here's the formula: A= N/360 (πr^2)or akaArea of shaded area equal to the measurement of the central angle divided by 360 times pi to the second power.:)Just an EXAMPLE. A = 196/360 (π16^2)
The area formula for the parallelogram is related to the area formula for a rectangle because you can make the parallelogram into a rectangle to find the area.
The area of the shaded region is 1265.42 meters squared, since I subtracted the two totals of both the unshaded region and the shaded region of a circle.