a circle
Any number from 4 to infinity, depending on whether the arcs are allowed to overlap
31 degrees
236-124/2=56 degrees
If the circumference is split into 4 arcs then the 4th arc is 360-20-140-50 = 150 degrees
s = rθs=arc lengthr=radius lengthθ= degree measure in radiansthis formula shows that arc length depends on both degree measure and the length of the radiustherefore, it is possible to for two arcs to have the same degree measure, but different radius lengthsthe circumference of a circle is a good example of an arc length of the whole circle
Any number from 4 to infinity, depending on whether the arcs are allowed to overlap
It is: 360/4 = 90 degrees
Degrees, Grads, or Radians.
Yes, as long as the arcs do NOT overlap.
45 degrees
31 degrees
½ the sum of the intercepted arcs.
236-124/2=56 degrees
No. The first is a measure of length, the second is a measure of angular displacement. If you have two circles with arcs of the same angular measure, the lengths of the arcs will not be the same.
Congruent Arcs
The circumference of a circle is 360 degrees so measure out five 72 degree arcs and join them to the centre of the circle.
20 degrees