Anyone good at mathematics?
Discussion
JJCW said:
Paint picture needed :P
A description will have to suffice.Draw a circle
Draw a line on the diameter, dividing the circle in half horizontally.
In each of the semi-circles, draw a horizontal line, crossing the point at half the radius.
The area of the piece below the diameter is larger than the bottom slice, but how do I work out the two different areas?
Basic principal is:
Work out area of segment.
Subtract the area of the triangular bit of the segment.
This gives you the area of the sector (the bit bounded by the perimeter and the chord [which is the horizontal line of which you speak]).
How you work out the area of the segment will depend on which numbers you already know. There are calculators out there to do it, but I'm having trouble finding a decent one at the mo.
I think I've understood you correctly. HTH.
ETA. Must type faster, but here's a calculator
Work out area of segment.
Subtract the area of the triangular bit of the segment.
This gives you the area of the sector (the bit bounded by the perimeter and the chord [which is the horizontal line of which you speak]).
How you work out the area of the segment will depend on which numbers you already know. There are calculators out there to do it, but I'm having trouble finding a decent one at the mo.
I think I've understood you correctly. HTH.
ETA. Must type faster, but here's a calculator
Edited by bitwrx on Friday 6th March 14:39
bitwrx said:
Basic principal is:
Work out area of segment.
Subtract the area of the triangular bit of the segment.
This gives you the area of the sector (the bit bounded by the perimeter and the chord [which is the horizontal line of which you speak]).
How you work out the area of the segment will depend on which numbers you already know. There are calculators out there to do it, but I'm having trouble finding a decent one at the mo.
I think I've understood you correctly. HTH.
ETA. Must type faster, but here's a calculator
How does one work out the length of the chord?Work out area of segment.
Subtract the area of the triangular bit of the segment.
This gives you the area of the sector (the bit bounded by the perimeter and the chord [which is the horizontal line of which you speak]).
How you work out the area of the segment will depend on which numbers you already know. There are calculators out there to do it, but I'm having trouble finding a decent one at the mo.
I think I've understood you correctly. HTH.
ETA. Must type faster, but here's a calculator
Edited by bitwrx on Friday 6th March 14:39
cheshire_cat said:
turbobloke said:
cheshire_cat said:
How does one work out the length of the chord?
If you know the length of two sides (r) and the angle subtended at the centre by the chord, you could use the cosine rule.Gassing Station | The Pie & Piston Archive | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff