It depends on the diameter of the circle and the width of the square, if they are the same then the answer is no. If you draw yourself a square then inscribe a circle with a radius of half the length of a side of the square, the circle will fit inside the square but the corners of the square will be outside the circle. Thus by inspection the area of the square is larger than the area of the circle.
A circle with radius 15mm will fit in a 30mm square. Find the intersection of the square's diagonals, that is the center of the circle.
It depends in which shape you want to inscribe it e.g. circle, triangle, hexagon etc. If you provide more information, someone should be able to tell you.
The answer depends on their relative size: is the circle inside the square, the square inside the circle or something else?
The diagonal of the square.
Perpendicular bisector.
It is not. If you draw yourself a square then inscribe a circle with a radius of half the length of a side of the square, the circle will fit inside the square but the corners of the square will be outside the circle. Thus by inspection the area of the square is larger than the area of the circle.
It depends on the diameter of the circle and the width of the square, if they are the same then the answer is no. If you draw yourself a square then inscribe a circle with a radius of half the length of a side of the square, the circle will fit inside the square but the corners of the square will be outside the circle. Thus by inspection the area of the square is larger than the area of the circle.
A circle with radius 15mm will fit in a 30mm square. Find the intersection of the square's diagonals, that is the center of the circle.
The largest diameter you can inscribe in a circle is a square. The square's diagonal is equal to the diameter of the circle; the length of the side of the square is therefore equal to the circle's diameter, divided by the square root of 2.
It depends in which shape you want to inscribe it e.g. circle, triangle, hexagon etc. If you provide more information, someone should be able to tell you.
The answer depends on their relative size: is the circle inside the square, the square inside the circle or something else?
The diagonal of the square.
You find the area of the whole square first. Then you find the area of the circle inside of it And then subtract the area of the circle from the area of the square and then you get the shaded area of the square
If I understand your question correctly, you would need to subtract the area of the inscribed circle from the circumscribed circle. Which would approximately be 78.60cm squared.
The is not stated that the circle inside the square was the greatest possible circle, so all one can say is 8pi at most.
If the circle is inside the square, four.