Circumference = pi*d
A very rough estimate would be to take pi = 3 and d = 16 giving 48 cm
A more precise answer would be pi = 3.14, d = 16.3 and circumference = 51.182 cm or 51.2 cm to 1 dp
Taking a still more accurate value of pi gives the circumference of 51.21 cm, still 51.2 cm when rounded to 1 dp.
It depends on whether a 2 inch circle refers to one whose (a) radius (b) diameter or (c) circumference is 2 inches. I suspect not (c), but certainly cannot pick between (a) and (b).
If you mean a sector with an arc of 110 degrees and an area of 50 square units Area of all the circle: 360/110 times 50 = 163.'63' square units Radius of the circle is the square root of 163.'63'/pi = 7.2171377402 So the radius of the circle is about 7 units
Law 5 of the official MCC Rules of Cricket states: The ball, when new, shall weigh not less than five and a half ounces (155.9 grams) nor more than five and three quarter ounces (163 grams), and shall measure not less than eight and thirteen sixteenths inches (22.4 cm), nor more than nine inches (22.9 cm) in circumference. The diameter can be found by dividing the circumference by pi, 3.141593.
It depends on your route, but the approximate driving distance (using major roadways) is 163 km.
163 = 163/1
A+B=163 so A=163-B and B=163-A
8% of 163= 8% * 163= 0.08 * 163= 13.04
The balls have a circumference of 224-235 mm (8.8-9.3 in) and weigh 156-163 g (5.5-5.7 oz). Use pi to figure out the radius :-)
The positive integer factors of 163 are: 1, 163
-163 is deeper. it represents that it is 163 units down.
163 = 10100011
163 is a prime.