Given: a square with side = s and a circle with radius = s (radius is equal to the length of the side of the square) Areasquare = side squared = s2 Areacircle = pi times the square of the radius = pi times s2 Areasquare : areacircle = s2 : pi s2 = 1 : pi (The ratio is one to pi.)
Let's call the number 'K' ... the side of the square and the radius of the circle.-- the area of the square is [ K2 ]-- the area of the circle is [ (pi) K2 ]-- The ratio of the circle to the square is [(pi) K2 / K2 ] = pi
Radius of a circle = circumference/2*pi
The ratio of a circle's circumference to its area is called the reciprocal of half the radius. The ratio of the circumference to its radius is called two times pi.
Length of arc = angle of arc (in radians) × radius of circle With a ratio of 7:8 the area of the sector is 7/8 the area of the whole circle. This is the same as saying that the circle has been divided up into 8 equal sectors and 7 have been shaded in. Dividing the circle up into 8 equal sectors will give each sector an angle of arc of 2π × 1/8 7 of these sectors will thus encompass an angle of arc of 2π × 1/8 × 7 = 2π × 7/8 = 7π/4 Thus the length of the arc of the sector is 7π/4 × radius of the circle. --------------------------------- Alternatively, it can be considered that as 7/8 of the area is in the sector, the length of the arc is 7/8 the circumference of the circle = 7/8 × 2π × radius = 7π/4 × radius.
The area of any circle is determined by the formula: A = πr2 where A is the area, π is "pi", the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter (approximately 3.1416), and r is the radius of a circle, or half its diameter. If your diameter is 70 feet, the radius is 35 feet. So, ... A = πr2 = (app) 3.1416 x 352 = (app) 3,848 square feet, or about 0.09 acres.
Length of diameter:length of radius = 2:1
Finding a circle with the same area as a square is known as squaring the circle. It has been proven to be impossible. (this was done in 1882) I have included some references as links to explain why this cannot be done. If you have a circle inscribed a square, then its radius is 1/2 of the side length of the square or its diameter is the length of a side. If this is what you mean then the ratio of the side of the square to the radius of the circle is 1 to 1/2 or 2 to 1.
diameter to radius ratio (for same circle) is 2:1
By using the other information supplied about the circle to calculate either its radius (from which its area can be calculated) or its area (if the circle is similar to another with a given area and some ratio between the two circle is given):If the diameter is given: radius = diameter ÷ 2If the circumference is given: radius = circumference ÷ 2πIf the circle is similar to another circle which has a given area, and the length ratio is given; square the length ratio to get the area ratio and apply to the given area.
Let's call the number 'K' ... the side of the square and the radius of the circle.-- the area of the square is [ K2 ]-- the area of the circle is [ (pi) K2 ]-- The ratio of the circle to the square is [(pi) K2 / K2 ] = pi
1/3.15159
There is no direct ratio. The area is related to the square of the radius by the factor "pi." A = (pi) r2 (Pi is about 3.1416)
In ratios, the ratios of areas is the square of the ratio of sides. Consider the original circle and the new larger circle formed by multiplying its radius (length) by 3: The circles have lengths in the ratio 1 : 3 → the circle have areas in the ratio 1² : 3² = 1 : 9 → The larger circle's area is 9 × 120 mm² = 1080 mm²
The ratio of the circumference to the radius of the circle is 2 times pi
Radius of a circle = circumference/2*pi
It depends on the ratio of what of the circle? Its circumference, diameter, area?
In a circle, the area of the circle is pi times the radius squared