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Circumference of a Circle
Part II
Unit 2 > Lesson 2 of 6

Circumference, diameter and radii are measured in linear units, such as inches and centimeters. A circle has many different radii and many different diameters, each passing through the center. A real-life example of a radius is the spoke of a bicycle wheel. A 9-inch pizza is an example of a diameter: when one makes the first cut to slice a round pizza pie in half, this cut is the diameter of the pizza. So a 9-inch pizza has a 9-inch diameter. Let's look at some examples of finding the circumference of a circle. In these examples, we will use Pi = 3.14 to simplify our calculations.   [IMAGE]


Example 1: The radius of a circle is 2 inches. What is the diameter? [IMAGE]
Solution: [IMAGE]
  d = 2 · (2 in)
  d = 4 in

Example 2: The diameter of a circle is 3 centimeters. What is the circumference? [IMAGE]
Solution: C equals Pi times d
  C = 3.14 · (3 cm)
  C = 9.42 cm

Example 3: The radius of a circle is 2 inches. What is the circumference? [IMAGE]
Solution: [IMAGE]
  d = 2 · (2 in)
  d = 4 in
  C equals Pi times d
  C = 3.14 · (4 in)
  C = 12.56 in

Example 4: The circumference of a circle is 15.7 centimeters. What is the diameter? [IMAGE]
Solution: C equals Pi times d
  15.7 cm = 3.14 · d
  15.7 cm ÷ 3.14 = d
  d = 15.7 cm ÷ 3.14
  d = 5 cm

Summary: The number Pi is the ratio of the circumference of a circle to the diameter. The value of Pi is approximately 3.14159265358979323846...The diameter of a circle is twice the radius. Given the diameter or radius of a circle, we can find the circumference. We can also find the diameter (and radius) of a circle given the circumference. The formulas for diameter and circumference of a circle are listed below. We round Pi to 3.14 in order to simplify our calculations.
[IMAGE]
C equals Pi times d


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Last Modified 14 May 2012