Area of the sector: 50/360 times pi times 8 squared = 27.925 square cm to 3 dp
The question probably refers to the internal angles of a triangle which total 180° . Also, the angle at the centre of a circle and subtended by half the circle is 180°.
An angle subtended at the semicircular arc is 90 degrees.
There is 360 degrees in a circle.
Let us recall the formula for the circumference of a circle. That one is 2pi r. r is the radius of the circle and 2pi is the angle in radian measure subtended by the entire circle at the centre. If this is so, then any arc length 'l' will be equal to the product of the angle in radian measure subtended by the arc at the centre and the radius.So l = theta r. Say theta is the angle subtended by the arc at the centre.Therefrom, r = l / Theta.
How can a circle measure 180 degrees? Circles don't have any angles!
It is 360 degrees because angles around a point add up to 360 degrees
It is the consequence of one of the circle theorems and in some books, it is considered a theorem itself. The underlying proposition is that the angle subtended at the circumference of the circle by any arc of a circle is half the angle subtended at the centre. In the case of a semicircle, the arc is the half circle and the angle at the centre is the one that the diameter makes at the centre of the circle ie 180 degrees. So the angle at the circumference is half that ie 90 degrees.
The question probably refers to the internal angles of a triangle which total 180° . Also, the angle at the centre of a circle and subtended by half the circle is 180°.
Construct a circle and divide the circumference into 36 equal arcs Each arc will represent 10 degrees and 11 of them subtended to the circle's centre will create an obtuse angle of 110 degrees
An angle subtended at the semicircular arc is 90 degrees.
There is 360 degrees in a circle.
Let us recall the formula for the circumference of a circle. That one is 2pi r. r is the radius of the circle and 2pi is the angle in radian measure subtended by the entire circle at the centre. If this is so, then any arc length 'l' will be equal to the product of the angle in radian measure subtended by the arc at the centre and the radius.So l = theta r. Say theta is the angle subtended by the arc at the centre.Therefrom, r = l / Theta.
No. Concentric circles have the same centre but not [usually] the same radius. Congruent circles have the same radius, but not [usually] the same centre. If you have two concentric congruent circles one will be exactly on top of the other.
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If an arc of a circle is drawn so that the length of the arc is equal to the radius of the circle then the angle at the centre of the circle subtended by the arc is called one radian.Then the angle subtended by the entire circle is given by the ratio , circumference / radius = 2πr/r = 2π radians.2π radians is equivalent to 360°So, π radians = 180°and thus, π/2 radians = 90°Pi over two, or Pi divided by two radians is the name for 90° in a circle.
If you mean they both have the same centre - they're called 'concentric' circles.
How can a circle measure 180 degrees? Circles don't have any angles!