SLIVER
A cross section, I believe
a slice
Yes you can. First, determine the percentage of the whole is represented by each slice of your circle (or pie) chart. Then make a bar for each slice that is the same percentage of the height of you bar graph. If you graph represents absolute number out of a total, the same principle applies.
the hydrogen slice will get smaller
Circle graphs, or pie charts as they are also known, are pictorial representations of the relative frequencies of categorical data. A circle graph that depicts relative frequency displays the percentage of each category on each section of the circle. A pie chart is best to use when you only have a few categories and you want to demonstrate a part-to-whole relationship. Making each slice a different color adds to the visual appeal of this type of graph.
This kind of conic section is a circle
Any way you slice the earth, you get a chunk whose outline is a circle. (or approximately a circle if you look closely the mountains and valleys that the cross section cuts through disturb the circle). a mathematical sphere will give a mathematical circle at all cross sections.
They are the shapes of the slices when you slice a cone. For example, when you slice it parallel to the base and look at the shape of the slice, you see the conic section known as a "circle". The others are the "ellipse", the "parabola", and the "hyperbola". Which one you get depends only on how you tilt the knife when you slice the cone.
That conic section is a circle.When you slice a cone with a plane parallel to the base of the cone, the sliced section is a circle, and the portion of the original cone on the side of the vertex is again a cone.An isosceles cone would be the out come
It is a sector of the circle
A semicircle
No.A sphere is a three dimensional object whereas a circle is a two dimensional shape