Approximately yes. Circumference is equal to pi times the diameter of the circle, which is 3.14159 times the diameter.
The circumference of a circle is pi times its diameter, pi being approximately 3.14.
Just multiply the diameter times pi. Pi is approximately 3.1416.
You need to multiply the diameter times pi.
The circumference of a circle with a diameter of 22 is 22 times pi or approximately 69.08.
Circumference of a circle is approximately 3.1416 times the diameter of the circle.
Approximately yes. Circumference is equal to pi times the diameter of the circle, which is 3.14159 times the diameter.
The circumference of a circle is pi times its diameter, pi being approximately 3.14.
Just multiply the diameter times pi. Pi is approximately 3.1416.
three times
You need to multiply the diameter times pi.
The circumference of a circle with a diameter of 22 is 22 times pi or approximately 69.08.
Your question doesn't make sense. The area of a circle is Pi (approximately 3.14) times the RADIUS squared. An example would be a circle with a diameter of 6 inches and thus the circle would have a radius of 3 inches. Three squared (3 times 3) is 9, and 9 times Pi is approximately 28.3 square inches.
The diameter of Uranus is approximately three times that of the Earth.
A circle's circumference is the product of Pi and its diameter, so a diameter can go around a circumference approximately 3.14 times.
Circumference of the circle: 63 times pi = 198 mm rounded to the nearest integer
If you triple the radius of a circle . . . -- You should not expect anything to happen. Those around are likely to remain completely unaware that you have done anything to your circle. -- You wind up with a circle that's three times as big as it used to be. -- The diameter of the circle is three times the original diameter. -- The circumference of the circle is three times the original circumference. -- The area of the circle is nine times the original area.