You mean radius. The radius is half the height of a circle. The diameter is the full height. So, you would add 14 to itself.Therefore, the diameter of the circle is 28 inches.
It depends on how the triangle and the circle are related - information that was not provided in the question.
its 1/2 the area of a circle with the length of on side of the triangle as the radius. then subtract 2 times the area of said equilateral triangle. (to find its height, use the Pythagorean theory. split the triangle in half to get its height, the base will be 1/2 the length of its side. Type your answer here...
Volume = Height * Area of Circle Area of Circle = pi*(Diameter/2)^2 Height = Diameter Volume = Diameter*(pi*(Diameter/2)^2) Volume = (pi/4)*Diameter^3 Diameter = (4/pi) * Volume ^ (1/3) Diameter = (4/3.14)*220^(1/3) ≈ 6.54 cm
What do you mean by "height" if you are not referring to the diameter? The diameter is the distance from one side of the circle to another, crossing its center. Due to the definition of what is a circle, all diameters have the same length, whether it be from left to right, from top to bottom, or at any other angle.
if you are given the circle's "height" then that is the diameter. the diameter is twice the length of the radius, so divide the height by two and you will get the radius.
You mean radius. The radius is half the height of a circle. The diameter is the full height. So, you would add 14 to itself.Therefore, the diameter of the circle is 28 inches.
It depends on how the triangle and the circle are related - information that was not provided in the question.
Triangles don't have a diameter. They have a base and a height.
its 1/2 the area of a circle with the length of on side of the triangle as the radius. then subtract 2 times the area of said equilateral triangle. (to find its height, use the Pythagorean theory. split the triangle in half to get its height, the base will be 1/2 the length of its side. Type your answer here...
Volume = Height * Area of Circle Area of Circle = pi*(Diameter/2)^2 Height = Diameter Volume = Diameter*(pi*(Diameter/2)^2) Volume = (pi/4)*Diameter^3 Diameter = (4/pi) * Volume ^ (1/3) Diameter = (4/3.14)*220^(1/3) ≈ 6.54 cm
51.96
Using 3.14 as Pi the area of circle is: 0
What do you mean by "height" if you are not referring to the diameter? The diameter is the distance from one side of the circle to another, crossing its center. Due to the definition of what is a circle, all diameters have the same length, whether it be from left to right, from top to bottom, or at any other angle.
The area of a circle is equal to that of a triangle whose base has the length of the circle's circumference (distance around the circle) and whose height equals the circle's radius which comes to Pi multiplied by the radius squared. Area of Triangle 1/2 *base*height
Using 3.14 as Pi the area of circle is: 379.94
yes. take an obtuse triangle that has a base of 8cm and a height of 3cm. then, take a right triangle that has a base of 3 cm and a height of 4 cm. do the math. the obtuse triangle will have a greater area. hope this helps.