The arc is: 19.06 units
The radius of a circle has no bearing on the angular measure of the arc: the radius can have any positive value.
The area of the sector of a circle with a radius of 2 inches and an arc of 60 degrees: 2.094 square inches.
The circumference of a circle is 360 degrees. The circumference of a circle is also 2*pi*radius or diameter*pi.
It is certainly possible. All you need is a the second circle to have a radius which is less than 20% of the radius of the first.
Not enough information is given to work out the radius of the circle as for instance what is the length of sector's arc in degrees
The radius of a circle has no bearing on the angular measure of the arc: the radius can have any positive value.
The area of the sector of a circle with a radius of 2 inches and an arc of 60 degrees: 2.094 square inches.
The circumference of a circle is 360 degrees. The circumference of a circle is also 2*pi*radius or diameter*pi.
It is certainly possible. All you need is a the second circle to have a radius which is less than 20% of the radius of the first.
The degree of the arc is: 30.08 degrees.
Not enough information is given to work out the radius of the circle as for instance what is the length of sector's arc in degrees
The length of an arc on a circle of radius 16, with an arc angle of 60 degrees is about 16.8.The circumference of the circle is 2 pi r, or about 100.5. 60 degrees of a circle is one sixth of the circle, so the arc is one sixth of 100.5, or 16.8.
To find the arc length, you also need to know the radius (or diameter) of the arc. The arc length is then found by finding the circumference of the full circle (2xPIxradius) and then dividing by 4 to find just one quarter of the circle (90 degrees).
When the arc length is the same size as a circle's radius it is known as a radian and it measures just under 57.3 degrees
The length of an arc measuring 60 degrees given a circle with a radius of 6 is 2*pi, that is 6,2831 approximately.The perimeter of a circle is calculated with the formula:L = 2 * pi * rwhere L is the perimeter and r the radius of the circle. This is equivalent to calculating the length of an arc measuring 360 degrees. The length of any arc smaller than 360 is proportionally smaller. Given that 60 degrees is 1/6 of the total circle (360), the length of the arc will be 1/6 of the perimeter.2 * pi * 6L = --------------- = 2 * pi6
A circle contains 360 degrees. Draw a circle, add a radius to any point on it, and then rotate the radius completely around. After it has returned to the point it initially intersected the curve, the radius will have rotated through 360 degrees.(another explanation, maybe no better.)A complete circle measures 360 degrees, so a half-circle is 180 degrees, a quarter-circle is 90 degrees and so forth. Another way to look at it is in terms of the central angle formed by the radii drawn from each endpoint of the arc - the measure of the arc in degrees is the same as the measure of this central angle in degrees.
It depends on what information you have: the radius and the area of the sector or the length of the arc.