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0 votes
I REALLY need help. I don't understand this at all and I need to pass. I suck at geometry.


Find the difference in area between the large circle and the small circle. Click on the answer until the correct answer is showing.



Answer options are in photos
along with A = 16 as an option.
I REALLY need help. I don't understand this at all and I need to pass. I suck at geometry-example-1
I REALLY need help. I don't understand this at all and I need to pass. I suck at geometry-example-1
I REALLY need help. I don't understand this at all and I need to pass. I suck at geometry-example-2
I REALLY need help. I don't understand this at all and I need to pass. I suck at geometry-example-3
I REALLY need help. I don't understand this at all and I need to pass. I suck at geometry-example-4
I REALLY need help. I don't understand this at all and I need to pass. I suck at geometry-example-5
User Elang
by
6.8k points

2 Answers

5 votes
either as aforementioned above, or use
\bf \textit{Area of a Ring}\\\\ A=\pi (R^2-r^2)\qquad \begin{cases} R=\textit{longer radius}\\ r=\textit{shorter radius} \end{cases}
User Csl
by
7.4k points
5 votes
Answer: A=27
\pi
User Vlad Polyanskiy
by
6.5k points