Wiki User
∙ 14y agoRadius is half the diameter, so the radius mentioned in the question would be 8 cm
Wiki User
∙ 14y agoThe radius of a circle is the distance from the center of the circle, out to the edge of the circle. The distance all the way across the circle is the "diameter." Half of the diameter is the radius.
to get the radius of a circle given the diameter, than simply divide the diameter by 2 to get the radius. in this case, the answer to your question would be 37.5 cm. hope this helps!!!
Yes because it is twice the size of the radius.
because it has more than one diameter
It's longer than both. The circumference - is the distance around the circle... The diameter - is the distance across the circle, passing through the centre... The radius - is the distance from the centre of the circle to the edge.
No, only if the diameter is bigger than the radius is the radius smaller than the diameter.
The radius of a circle is the distance from the center of the circle, out to the edge of the circle. The distance all the way across the circle is the "diameter." Half of the diameter is the radius.
Yes. The radius is one-half of the diameter.
The radius of a circle is always smaller than the diameter and the circumference.
to get the radius of a circle given the diameter, than simply divide the diameter by 2 to get the radius. in this case, the answer to your question would be 37.5 cm. hope this helps!!!
Yes because it is twice the size of the radius.
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A 7 centimeter circle has a diameter of 7 centimeters and a radius of 3.5 centimeters. The formula to calculate the area of a circle is πr^2, so for a circle with a radius of 3.5cm, the area would be approximately 38.48 square centimeters.
Diameter and radius
The radius would be 6 cm because the diameter is 2 times bigger than the radius.
because it has more than one diameter
It's longer than both. The circumference - is the distance around the circle... The diameter - is the distance across the circle, passing through the centre... The radius - is the distance from the centre of the circle to the edge.