346,382 views
42 votes
42 votes
If answered please explain because this is really hard

If answered please explain because this is really hard-example-1
User Zaz
by
3.0k points

1 Answer

5 votes
5 votes

This is really simple, all you have to do is establish a new relation which describes this particular case;

For example if i wanted to find the area of the full circle (360°), i would use the equation which states that;


a = \pi \: r {}^(2)


a = \pi \: 8 {}^(2)


a = 3.14 * 64


a = 201.06 \: inches {}^(2)

But do i really wan the full 360 degrees?

In reality i only need a 70 degree circle (in a sense).

If 360 makes a full circle

How many circles is 70?

Use the triple rule to find that;


x = (70)/(360) = 0.1945 \: cirles

So that area would be;


\alpha = 0.1945 * 201.06 = 39.0617 \:

That is your area. a=39 inches² rounded to the nearest tenth.

User Alex Dovzhanyn
by
3.1k points
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