Cause circles have an awesomeness factor of 12, compared to the awesomeness factor of a square, which is 5
It depends on the diameter of the circle and the width of the square, if they are the same then the answer is no. If you draw yourself a square then inscribe a circle with a radius of half the length of a side of the square, the circle will fit inside the square but the corners of the square will be outside the circle. Thus by inspection the area of the square is larger than the area of the circle.
The answer depends on the square!
no
Find the total area of the square: length times height. Next, find the total area of the circle: Pi times radius to the second power, or Pi(r squared). If you are doing this by hand, 3.14 is usually acceptable for Pi. Once you have the are of both the square and the circle (the area of the circle should be smaller than that of the square), subtract the area of the circle from the area of the square. The difference is the area of those extra corners of the square that the circle does not occupy. It is actually quite simple. This demonstrates the danger of thinking in words rather than pictures.
Every mixed number is more than ' 1 '. If the radius of the circle is more than '1', then the area of the circle is more than (pi) square units.
I believe that you have to keep pressing square fast or circle fast (hope that helps
It depends on the diameter of the circle and the width of the square, if they are the same then the answer is no. If you draw yourself a square then inscribe a circle with a radius of half the length of a side of the square, the circle will fit inside the square but the corners of the square will be outside the circle. Thus by inspection the area of the square is larger than the area of the circle.
It is not. If you draw yourself a square then inscribe a circle with a radius of half the length of a side of the square, the circle will fit inside the square but the corners of the square will be outside the circle. Thus by inspection the area of the square is larger than the area of the circle.
The answer depends on the square!
no
faster than
no
Order is square then circle then triangle then door Square once more than circle Circle is pressed just once Square once less than triangle
yes, a circle has the smallest surface area of anything. just imagine a circle inside a square so that there is 1 point on each side of the square touching a point on the circle. The corners of the square are the only thing the circle does not have, while the circle does not have anything the square does not have. Square is bigger
Varibles and controls for does a ball roll faster on grass or dirt
The mass and the trajectory of the object affect the speed at which the object will roll.
In a nut shell, because heat transfers faster from hotter to colder, like how a car will roll down a steep hill faster that it will roll down a hill that is less steep.