If you don't even understand the question well enough to write it comprehensibly, then just go ahead and take the F.
In a circle, the circumference and diameter vary directly. Which of the following equations would allow you to find the diameter of a circle with a circumference of 154 if you know that in a second circle the diameter is 14 when the circumference is 44?
AUS. quarter is 24.26 mm in diameter. Multiply by pi to get the circumference.(second person) what is the answer stupid!
For circumference, multiply the diameter by pi and round the product to the second decimal place. For area, multiply the square of the radius by pi and round the product to the second decimal place.
distress or mistress
Yes! If It spins one time, then that is the circumference. Therefore if you spin it a second time, that doubles it!
The circumference and area of a circle, with radius r is: circumference = 2*pi*r and area = pi*r2 Use the first to calculate r and then the second to calculate the area.
Each revolution rolls the truck ahead 1 tire-circumference.(2 revs per second) x (2.5 meters per rev) = 5 meters per second
2 meter circumference rotating 1 revolution per second produces a linear speedof 2 meters per second.The question can be slightly more exciting if you give the diameter of the wheel,or even its radius, instead of its circumference.
The size of a small moon The first was 160 kilometers in diameter and had a circumference of 503 km. The second was 900 km in diameter and had a circumference of 2827 km.
Saturn's equatorial circumference is 235,298 miles, or 378,675 kilometers. Saturn's equatorial radius is 60,268 kilometers. It is the second largest planet in the Solar System.
The area of a circle with radius r is pi*r*r and its circumference is 2*pi*r Use the first to find r and then use that value of r in the second to find the circumference.
Divide the 62,500 miles/second by the circumference (in miles); that will give you the revolutions per second.Note: If you are given the diameter, you can multiply that by pi to get the circumference; if you are given the radius, multiply that by 2 x pi.