The area of a circle of radius 12 is 144 pi; the part of the circle defined by such an arc (the arc itself, of course, has an area of 0) is 100/360 of that, which simplifies to 40 pi. To 3 significant digits, that is 126.
89.52 degrees.
To find the arc length of a circle given a central angle, you can use the formula: Arc Length = (θ/360) × (2πr), where θ is the central angle in degrees and r is the radius of the circle. For a circle with a radius of 60 inches and a central angle of 35 degrees, the arc length would be: Arc Length = (35/360) × (2π × 60) ≈ 36.7 inches.
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 radius
360 degrees
89.52 degrees.
The area of the sector of the circle formed by the central angle is: 37.7 square units.
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.
Radius: A line from the center of a circle to a point on the circle. Central Angle: The angle subtended at the center of a circle by two given points on the circle.
19.23
the radius
-- Circumference of the circle = (pi) x (radius) -- length of the intercepted arc/circumference = degree measure of the central angle/360 degrees
5.23
Find the area of the shaded sector. radius of 3 ...A+ = 7.07
If this is a central angle, the 72/360 x (2xpix4) = 5.024
If the sector of a circle has a central angle of 50 and an area of 605 cm2, the radius is: 37.24 cm
The measure of the central angle divided by 360 degrees equals the arc length divided by circumference. So 36 degrees divided by 360 degrees equals 2pi cm/ 2pi*radius. 1/10=1/radius. Radius=10 cm.