Area = pi*r2 = 78.5 square units, approx.
Area = pi*r2 = 78.5 square units, approx.
Area = pi*r2 = 78.5 square units, approx.
Area = pi*r2 = 78.5 square units, approx.
Area = pi*r2 = 78.5 square units, approx.
9.9975
Well, since the formula for the area of a circle is Pi (3.14) times the radius squared, you can use substitution to get an equation that looks like this: 3.14(102) ...which can be simplified to 3.14(100), which can be simplified to come up with the answer of 314 square units.
The diameter of a circle whose circumference is 314 is about 1 (99.95).
Circumference = 2 pi r = 62.8 so r = 31.4/pi = 10 Area = pi r2 = 100 pi = 314 in2
No. Assuming just talking about the base area and not the total surface area as no height of the pans is given: radius = diameter/2 Area_circle = π x radius2 = π x (20 in/2)2 = 100π sq in ≈ 314 sq in Area_square = side2 = (18 in)2 = 324 sq in ⇒ square of 18 in has larger area than a circle of diameter 20 in.
9.9975
Using 3.14 as Pi the area of circle is: 314.0
314 sqmm
The area is 314 cm2
A circle with a radius of 10 meters has an area of 314 square meters.
A circle with a radius of 10 meters has an area of 314 square meters.
10 feet.
Knowing that the area of a circle is its radius squared times Pi, the area of a 10 ft radius circle is 100*Pi square ft, or about 314 square feet.
3.14*r*r=area 3.14*100=314 or 100pi
314 feet²Area of a circle = pi x radius²let pi = 3.14A = 3.14 x 10²A = 3.14 x 100A = 314 feet²
Circumference = 314 inches implies radius = 49.97 inches and so area = 7846.02 sq inches (approx).
It is: the square root of (314/pi) = 9.997 units to 3 dp