The circumference is the distance around a circle and it is measured by:- Circumference of a circle = 2*pi*radius or pi*diameter
Using a compass and the circumference is measured by 2 times pi times radius or diameter times pi.
It is used in finding the circumference and area of a circle. Circumference = 2*pi*radius or pi*diameter measured in linear units Area = pi*radius2 measured in square units
16*pi measured in linear units
They are measured by the paki thats digging it for the lazy prat that wants it.
The circumference is the distance around a circle and it is measured by:- Circumference of a circle = 2*pi*radius or pi*diameter
Using a compass and the circumference is measured by 2 times pi times radius or diameter times pi.
pi*14 measured in linear units
No. "pi" is the 'ratio' of circumference to diameter of a circle. It doesn't care what the unit is,just as long as both are measured in the same unit.
It is used in finding the circumference and area of a circle. Circumference = 2*pi*radius or pi*diameter measured in linear units Area = pi*radius2 measured in square units
Earth's diameter is approximately 12,742 kilometers and its circumference is around 40,075 kilometers.
16*pi measured in linear units
They are measured by the paki thats digging it for the lazy prat that wants it.
The value of pi is a circle's circumference divided by its diameter and pi is an irrational number.
To measure the concrete needed for a circular pad:-- Decide how thick (deep) the pad is to be. If it's in inches, divide by 12 for thickness in feet.-- Measure either the circumference or the diameter of the circle, in feet.-- If you measured the circumference, then the cubic yds of concrete needed is(0.00295) x (circumference) x (circumference, again) x (thickness) ... all in feet-- If you measured the diameter, then the cubic yds of concrete needed is(0.0291) x (diameter) x (diameter, again) x (thickness) ... all in feet
Pi is not measured in degrees because its value is a circle's circumference divided by its diameter which is about 3.14
The value of pi is constant. It is calculated by dividing the circumference of a circle by its diameter. As the circle's circumference grows, the diameter grows at the same rate, proportionally. This means that the circumference divided by the diameter (if measured precisely) will always yield pi. If it does not, it is not a perfect circle. The ratio between the circumference and the diameter of a circle will always stay the same, no matter how you change the size of the circle.