squares do not have a radius
This is an interesting question: very simple but incredibly difficult. I have not found a proper answer but have got a partial answer to a related question: given a number of unit squares, what is the smallest circle that they will fit into. The two are linked very simply: if 2 unit squares will fit in a circle of radius 1.118 then a unit circle can hold 2 squares of a maximum side of 1/1.118 units.The answers given below can be proved only for n = 1 and 2.1 square : radius = sqrt(2)/2 = 0.707 approx.2 squares : radius = sqrt(5)/2 = 1.118 approx.3 squares : radius = 1.2884 squares : radius = 1.4145 squares : radius = 1.58110 squares : radius = 2.12120 squares : radius = 2.89330 squares : radius = 3.485.For all integers up to 35 see www2.stetson.edu/~efriedma/squincir/
Squares don't have radius... p.s. im a a*$*$*h*0*l*3 who doesnt know what im talking about... It would be 6... good luck with that A+LS
So whats the question? If i had 5 squares remove 3 lines to make 4 squares but keep the 3 lines within the 4 squares what?
You can make three squares
squares do not have a radius
This is an interesting question: very simple but incredibly difficult. I have not found a proper answer but have got a partial answer to a related question: given a number of unit squares, what is the smallest circle that they will fit into. The two are linked very simply: if 2 unit squares will fit in a circle of radius 1.118 then a unit circle can hold 2 squares of a maximum side of 1/1.118 units.The answers given below can be proved only for n = 1 and 2.1 square : radius = sqrt(2)/2 = 0.707 approx.2 squares : radius = sqrt(5)/2 = 1.118 approx.3 squares : radius = 1.2884 squares : radius = 1.4145 squares : radius = 1.58110 squares : radius = 2.12120 squares : radius = 2.89330 squares : radius = 3.485.For all integers up to 35 see www2.stetson.edu/~efriedma/squincir/
oh wow, squares DO have radius'!& the answer IS 6(:
Squares don't have radius... p.s. im a a*$*$*h*0*l*3 who doesnt know what im talking about... It would be 6... good luck with that A+LS
18
Equation of circle: x^2 +y^2 -4x -6y -3 = 0 Completing the squares: (x-2)^2 +(y-3)^2 = 16 square units Therefore center of circle is at (2, 3) and its radius is 4 units
8 squares x 2/3 = 16/3 squares = 5 1/3 squares
So whats the question? If i had 5 squares remove 3 lines to make 4 squares but keep the 3 lines within the 4 squares what?
You can make three squares
There are 48 such squares.
Squares: Take two sides and multiply them against each other, ex. 3.5•3.5= the area. Rectangles: Same as squares. A square is a rectangle. Circles: Radius times radius times pi equals area.
A radius squared fits pi times into a circle (The area of a circle divided by pi is the radius squared).