The title of the picture is "Circumference and Area of Circles" on page D-60. It's not rocket science, darling. Just turn to page D-60 and feast your eyes on the wonders of circles. You're welcome.
Usually when dealing with circles. (surface area of a cylinder, circumference of a circle, volume of a cylinder, etc.)
Area = circumference squared... You do circumference divided by 4,... and then divide that by Pi.
Area = (Circumference)2/(4*pi)
you find the surface area of a circle by first finding the area of the circles/ two ends. you do this by multiplying the diameter by pi then multiply by two, that is both ends put together then you find the area of the flat part by finding out the circumference of the circle ends, then multiply that by the height of the cylinder. circumference= pi times the diameter then add all your calculation together, and you have the surface area of your cylinder :)
You dived the area by the circumference of the circle.
The derivative of a circles area is it's circumference.
Circumfrences are only for circles.
Using 3.14 as Pi the area of circle is: 0
Radius, Diameter, Arc,Seicircle, Circumference and area.
Yes
A square can't have a circumference. That's only for circles squares have area, volume, or perimeter.
Because of the radius of the circle
YES!!! THey would be congruent circles; tjhat is appear to be the same size.
Area=pi times radius squared Circumference=pi times diameter or pi times radius times two
Find the circumference of the circles (the ends) and multiply it by the height of the cylinder. Then add that to the area of the ends.
height * circumference (picture the cylinder cut along the long edge, then rolled out flat, and you would measure height * width) note: if you need to include the circles at the top and bottom of the cylinder, add (circumference / 3.1415926 )^2 * 2 * 3.1415926
You can't, a circumference is for circles. Televisions are not round. If you mean the area, you take the long side and the shot side and multiply them.