That's a "sector" of the circle.
It looks like a slice of pie.
The area bounded by an arc of circle and two radii is known as a "circular sector"
NO. All the radii of a circle are of exactly the same length. In fact, that is the definition of the locus of a point describing a circle.
Radii is the plural of radius. A radius is the length of a line segment between the center and the circumference of a circle or sphere.
A sector is basically just one portion of a circle. However, the sides of a vector are always two radii of the circle. If you are looking at a whole pie, and you portion off a single slice of pie, the single slice of pie would be considered a vector to the entire pie.
Isn't it the radii?
Sector.
The area bounded by an arc of circle and two radii is known as a "circular sector"
A sector.
A sector
I always called it an arc. It is simply a section of the circle. The ends are determined by the two radii you referenced. Each of the radii start at the center of the circle and end at their intersection with the circle. The portion of the circle that lies between the ends of the two radii is an arc.
a sector is a portion of a circle bounded by the two radii and the included arc.
All the radii of a circle are of equal length. The radius is the distance from the center of the circle to the out edge. Having equal radii is what defines a circle.
Yes, all of the radii in a single circle are congruent.
The sum of two radii of a circle is the same as the diameter of the circle.
Yes. All radii of the same circle have the same length.
Yes, providing that the radii are all in the same circle
A part of a circle enclosed by two radii is called a sector.