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https://math.answers.com/other-math/How_do_you_find_the_area_of_a_balloon

How do you find the area of a balloon? - Answers

You mean the surface area, right? Assuming the balloon is approximately spherical, you can measure the diameter, divide by two to get the radius & plug that into this formula.A=¾πr²Where A is the area, r is the radius and π is the ratio of the circumpherence to the radius of a circle. 3.14 or 22/7 are good approximations to π, also a decent calculator will have a better approximation built in. To look it up search for "pi" (that's the Greek letter's name).



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How do you find the area of a balloon? - Answers

https://math.answers.com/other-math/How_do_you_find_the_area_of_a_balloon

You mean the surface area, right? Assuming the balloon is approximately spherical, you can measure the diameter, divide by two to get the radius & plug that into this formula.A=¾πr²Where A is the area, r is the radius and π is the ratio of the circumpherence to the radius of a circle. 3.14 or 22/7 are good approximations to π, also a decent calculator will have a better approximation built in. To look it up search for "pi" (that's the Greek letter's name).



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https://math.answers.com/other-math/How_do_you_find_the_area_of_a_balloon

How do you find the area of a balloon? - Answers

You mean the surface area, right? Assuming the balloon is approximately spherical, you can measure the diameter, divide by two to get the radius & plug that into this formula.A=¾πr²Where A is the area, r is the radius and π is the ratio of the circumpherence to the radius of a circle. 3.14 or 22/7 are good approximations to π, also a decent calculator will have a better approximation built in. To look it up search for "pi" (that's the Greek letter's name).

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      You mean the surface area, right? Assuming the balloon is approximately spherical, you can measure the diameter, divide by two to get the radius & plug that into this formula.A=¾πr²Where A is the area, r is the radius and π is the ratio of the circumpherence to the radius of a circle. 3.14 or 22/7 are good approximations to π, also a decent calculator will have a better approximation built in. To look it up search for "pi" (that's the Greek letter's name).
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