3.14 in other words "pi"!
No, the circumference of the circle divided by the diameter is pi.
The radius of a circle whose circumference is 36 pi (113.1) is: 18 (circumference divided by Pi divided by 2 = radius)
Circumference = 2*pi*525 units of measurements
Circumference = Diameter multiplied by Pi Diameter = Circumference divided by pi Radius = Diameter divided by 2.
Circumference equals the diameter times pi. The diameter is 2 times radius. Radius equals Circumference divided by pi then divided by 2.
Conceptually, the radius is the distance from the center of the circle to any point on its edge. If you know the circumference of the circle, then the radius is the circumference divided by 2 times pi.
The radius of a circle is the distance from the centre of the circle to a point on the circumference of the circle. If it is a drawing and the circle is to scale the radius can be measured with a ruler. If not, the radius can be calculated if the diameter, circumference or area of the circle is known. the radius is equal to: - the diameter divided by 2 - the circumference divided by 2pi(approx. 6.284) - the square root of the area divided pi (divide by pi first, then take the square root)
The radius of a circle is half the diameter or half the circumference divided by pi (3.1416).
A radius of a sphere is the distance from its centre to its surface. It is also half of the diameter. If you know the circumference of a circle, you can calculate its radius. Circumference divided by Pi divided by 2 = radius.
No, the circumference divided by the radius will always be pi for a circle.
They are: circumference/diameter = pi and circumference/2*radius = pi
Radius is diameter divided by two. Diameter is radius times two or circumference divided by pi. Circumference is diameter times pi. Pi is roughly 3.14