The circumference of a circle is 360 degrees.
The circumference of a circle is also 2*pi*radius or diameter*pi.
In degrees because an arc is part of the circumference of a circle which has a total of 360 degrees
360 degrees in a circle 120 degrees = 12mm 360 degrees = 36mm Therefore the circumference of the circle is 36mm.
In geometry, an arc is a curved portion of a circle. It is defined by two endpoints and the points along the circumference of the circle that lie between the endpoints. The measure of an arc is typically given in degrees.
The total circumference is (arc length) times (360) divided by (the angle degrees)
No. Given two points on a circle, the minor arc is the shortest arc linking them. The major arc is the longest.
It will be 1/3 of the circle's circumference
Part of the circumference of a circle less than 180 degrees
I'm assuming that "c" is short for "circumference". The length of an arc is (circumference)*(360/angle). So the length of an arc in a circle with circumference length of 18.84 is 6782.4/angle, where the angle is measured in degrees.
In degrees because an arc is part of the circumference of a circle which has a total of 360 degrees
The circumference will have 360 degrees. So the arc is 94/360 of the whole circle. That is, the whole circle will be 360/94 of the arc length. So the circumference of the shole circle is 19.68*360/94 = 75.37 units (to 2 dp)
360 degrees in a circle 120 degrees = 12mm 360 degrees = 36mm Therefore the circumference of the circle is 36mm.
It is half the circumference of a circle that has an arc of 180 degrees
In geometry, an arc is a curved portion of a circle. It is defined by two endpoints and the points along the circumference of the circle that lie between the endpoints. The measure of an arc is typically given in degrees.
An arc. The arc covering less than half the circumference is called a minor arc; the arc covering more than half is called a major arc.
A mathematical arc is any segment of the circumference of a circle. It is normally expressed in degrees, referring to the angle between the two lines drawn from either end of the arc to the center of the circle. Therefore, a 900 arc is 1/4 of the circle's circumference and a 1800 arc is half the circumference.
The total circumference is (arc length) times (360) divided by (the angle degrees)
An arc length of 120 degrees is 1/3 of the circumference of a circle