y = 2(x) - (pi/3) + (sqrt(3)/2)
there is no equation of Pi Circumference divided by diameter
TT in this case is standing in for the greek letter pi (π) TTr2 means "Pi times the radius squared" and is the equation for calculating the area of a circle.
First of all it is NOT 'pie', that is the meat pie or apple pie that you eat. The circular 'pi' is 'pi' (small/lower case) . 'pi' is the Classical Greek letter for lower case 'p', and means 'constant of **P**roportion'. To find the circumference of a circle the equation is C = pi d Circumference equals 'pi' X the diameter. or C = 2 pi r Circumference equals 'pi' X '2' X the radius.
40/pi which is approx 12.73
Pi
V = (pi) R2 hDivide each side of the equation by (pi)R2 :h = V/(pi)R2
0.5
y = 2(x) - (pi/3) + (sqrt(3)/2)
No. C = 2*pi*r is the equation representing the circumference of a circle. The area of a circle is equal to pi*(r^2).
Recall the equation A = pi * r^2. You've given the information that A = 289 pi. Now, simply solve the equation for r: A = pi * r^2 289 pi = pi * r^2 289 = r^2 sqrt(289) = r 17 = r
113.04 - 113.1
Circumference = Pi x Diameter (Pi equals 3.14)
there is no equation of Pi Circumference divided by diameter
A = pi * r2, so by dividing both sides of the equation by pi then taking the square root of both sides, you get... r = (A/pi)½ (r equals the square root of the quotient of A divided by pi.)
TT in this case is standing in for the greek letter pi (π) TTr2 means "Pi times the radius squared" and is the equation for calculating the area of a circle.
X = pi is an equation. If you're looking for common denominators, you should compare denominators.