The diameter of the circle is equal to the diagonal of the square, or the (side of the square) times the (square root of 2).
Its diameter is congruent to a side of square.
The diameter of the circle equals the length of a side of the square
Yes.
The sides of the Square.
The diagonal of the square.
Diameter
The diameter of the circle is congruent to the length of the diagonal of the inside square. If you know the length of one side of the square, you can use pythagorean's theorem to solve for its diagonal (hypotenuse) and thusly the square's diameter.
When a circle is folded along its diameter, it creates two congruent halves or semicircles.
Congruent; I think...
The formula for area of a circle isA=pi*r2where A=area, and r=radius of circlethe radius is half the diameter (D=2r), so A = pi*2.52= 19.63 (to 2 decimal places)
No because the diameter of a circle is its largest chord.
Not always unless it is the diameter of a circle which is its largest chord