The formula for the area (A) of a circle is A = π r2 - where r is the radius.
The diameter (d) of a circle is twice the radius.
The area of circle having a diameter of 24 ft is A = π 122 = 144π = 452.39 sq ft (2dp)
Circumference of circle: 20 × π = 62.832 feet rounded to 3 decimal places
circomference of a circle = pi*diameter = pi*14
The circumference of a circle whose diameter is 27 feet is about 84.82 feet.
The volume is pi*radius2*depth of fuel = 22.6 cubic feet = 140.9 Imperial gallons, approx.
dia frampton is 5'9" foot tall
It is 1692 US gallons, approx.
4 foot dia. pipe = 94gal/foot give or take!
Zero. Circles have area, but no volume.
Circumference of a 25 feet circle = pie x diameter x 12 942.477 inch 1 feet = 12 inch so i converted into inch as i am having the other component in inch No of 12 inch long blocks = circumference /12 so total 78 pieces will be required to make a circle of dia 25 feet
1/4 dia copper soft pipe per feet
The balloon is 3.05 meters in diameter.
unit weight = 10.68 (outer dia. of pipe - thickness of pipe) x thickness of pipe unit will be 'lbs/foot' 1 lbs = 0.45359237 kg and 1 foot = 0.3048 meter or 1 meter = 3.2808 feet
The area is 7.068 units2
Its circumference = 600*pi mm
16mm dia weight for running feet
A round pool that is 18 feet across and is 4 feet deep will hold about 7,617 gallons of water.
Divide the diameter by 2 to get the radius. Then use the formula: area = pi x radius2.
10' dia well how to use runing fit
785.375 cubic feet of water.
aprox 400 gal i have a 4 ft dia tank that's 6 ft long it holds 200 gal
one inch is one inch; one inch dia refers to one inch diameter of a circle; it is still one inch
the volume of the cylinder is 351.7 cubic feet and 7.48 gallons is 1 cubic foot. 7.48 x 351.7 = 2,630 gallons
r=d/2 A (of circle) = Pi*r2 = Pi*d2/4 Pi*222/4 ~= 380.1 square meters
public class CircleDiameter { publicCircleDiameter() { super(); } publicfloatgetDiameterFrmRadius(float radius){ return radius * 2; } /** * @param args */ public static void main(String[] args) { float radius = 5; CircleDiameter circle = newCircleDiameter(); float dia = circle.getDiameterFrmRadius(radius); System.out.println("Diameter of this circle is: " + dia); } }
Near enough as much as you like if you keep going for hours and days.