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 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.
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.