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.
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
A 130-degree radius typically refers to a circular arc or sector with a central angle of 130 degrees. In this context, the radius is the distance from the center of the circle to any point on its circumference. This means that if you were to draw a circle with a radius of a specific length, the arc defined by a 130-degree angle would represent a portion of that circle, covering about one-third of its total circumference.
89.52 degrees.
The area of the sector of the circle formed by the central angle is: 37.7 square units.
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.
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.
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.