No.
Circumference is the total distance around a plane figure. Usually a circle or ellipse.
Diameter is the distance of a straight line from edge to edge passing through the centre of a circle.
The formula for the circumference of a circle is the same, whatever its diameter. Circumference = pi*diameter.
No. Diameter is the distance across. Circumference is the distance around.
The converse of the statement "If two circles have the same diameter, then they have the same circumference" is "If two circles have the same circumference, then they have the same diameter." This means that if you know two circles share identical circumferences, you can conclude that their diameters are also equal.
The formula for the circumference of a circle is: C=2r(pi) Since diameter is the same as 2r, the circumference is 3476(pi).
about the same as the length of the volume
The formula for the circumference of a circle is the same, whatever its diameter. Circumference = pi*diameter.
No. Diameter is the distance across. Circumference is the distance around.
The formula for the circumference of a circle is: C=2r(pi) Since diameter is the same as 2r, the circumference is 3476(pi).
about the same as the length of the volume
Yes.
Yes.
The unit for a circumference is the same as the unit for length (or radius or diameter).
Yes
The circumference is the distance AROUND a circle. The diameter is the distance ACROSS a circle. The radius is the the distance FROM THE CENTER of the circle (same thing as one-half of the diameter).
Circumference is Pi x Diameter so do Circumference divided by Pi to get the diameter :)
No. The circumference is always (pi) times as long as the diameter. If it isn't, then whatever shape you're looking at is not a circle.
A radius is a straight line from the circumference (boundary) of a circle to the centre. A diameter is a straight line that goes from the circumference to the centre and then continues until it reaches the circumference of the other side. In a circle, all points on the circumference are the same distance from the centre. As a result, the second part of the diameter is the same as the first. In other words, diameter = radius + radius = 2*radius.