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The radius of a cylinder is half the thickness of its circular cross section.
9
pi radius squared. (radius squared, then multiply by pi.)
The answer will depend on what measure is required: length of a side, perimeter, radius or diameter (if circular), eccentricity (if an ellipse), area.The answer will depend on what measure is required: length of a side, perimeter, radius or diameter (if circular), eccentricity (if an ellipse), area.The answer will depend on what measure is required: length of a side, perimeter, radius or diameter (if circular), eccentricity (if an ellipse), area.The answer will depend on what measure is required: length of a side, perimeter, radius or diameter (if circular), eccentricity (if an ellipse), area.
There is no such thing as a "circular radius", and (pi) is just a number. With thosefacts in mind, the question is only slightly harder to grasp than smoke is, and itclearly has no answer.
24 miles
Radius is 7.0 KM
The speed of an object in circular motion is determined by its circumference divided by the time it takes to complete one full revolution. This speed is constant throughout the motion if the radius remains constant.
The radius of a cylinder is half the thickness of its circular cross section.
Area, A, of a circle: A = (pi)r^2 r^2 = A/pi r = √(A/pi) r = √(1808.64/pi) r ≈ 23.9939 miles * so i would round it up and it would be 24miles * You can round the answer up to 24, but a radius 24 is not so close to the area which is 1808.64. Check: (pi)24^2 ≈ 1809.56, and (pi)23.9939^2 ≈ 1808.64
9
The surface area of a circular based prism is (2pi x radius squared) + (2pi x radius x height)
Radius is a sensible measure to use with a circular (or spherical) shape. England is neither.
pi radius squared. (radius squared, then multiply by pi.)
The radius is the distance between the centre of a circular arc and a point on the arc.
The answer will depend on what measure is required: length of a side, perimeter, radius or diameter (if circular), eccentricity (if an ellipse), area.The answer will depend on what measure is required: length of a side, perimeter, radius or diameter (if circular), eccentricity (if an ellipse), area.The answer will depend on what measure is required: length of a side, perimeter, radius or diameter (if circular), eccentricity (if an ellipse), area.The answer will depend on what measure is required: length of a side, perimeter, radius or diameter (if circular), eccentricity (if an ellipse), area.
There is no such thing as a "circular radius", and (pi) is just a number. With thosefacts in mind, the question is only slightly harder to grasp than smoke is, and itclearly has no answer.