The circumference of a circle is 3.14159… times, or pi times bigger than its diameter.
No. The ratio of circumference to diameter for any circle is pi, which is approx 3.14 Consequently, the circumference of every circle is more than 3 times greater than its diameter. but i think it is not applicable for curve surface.
It will make the circumference of the circle bigger or smaller
9 times bigger
Circumference is Pi x Diameter so do Circumference divided by Pi to get the diameter :)
The circumference of a circle is 3.14159… times, or pi times bigger than its diameter.
No. The ratio of circumference to diameter for any circle is pi, which is approx 3.14 Consequently, the circumference of every circle is more than 3 times greater than its diameter. but i think it is not applicable for curve surface.
You cannot really compare those two different kinds of values - it's quite nonsense to compare area versus circumference. You could compare numbers but they'll vary depending on your choice of units. Anyway, it's perfectly possible to have shape of area, say, 1 m2 and circumference measured in kilometers - if the shapes perimeter is ragged.
It will make the circumference of the circle bigger or smaller
Given a diameter d, the circumference of a circle is Pi*d. Thus the circumference is Pi times larger than the diameter.
9 times bigger
Circumference is Pi x Diameter so do Circumference divided by Pi to get the diameter :)
8.68
Circumference is pi times diameter. Diameter is circumference divided by pi. Diameter is twice the radius. Radius is half the diameter.
The radius of a circle is always smaller than the diameter and the circumference.
Diameter = Circumference/pi
diameter = circumference/pi