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How do you find the perimeter of a quarter circle? - Answers

We know that the circumference of a circle is equal to the diameter times pi- or 3.14. With a quarter circle, we know the Radius- distance from the center point to the edge. Double that, and you have the diameter of a whole circle. Multiply that by pi, and you have the circumference of the whole circle- but since you have a quarter circle, divide that by 4. A 3 ft quarter- times 2= 6. 6x3.14= 18.84. divide THAT by 4=4.71. NOW add in the original radius for each of the two STRAIGHT sides- that is 3 x 2, or 6, PLUS the length of the curved part- 4.71, and you have 10.71 ft. So you have the length of the two straight sides, and the curving 3rd side combined.



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How do you find the perimeter of a quarter circle? - Answers

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

We know that the circumference of a circle is equal to the diameter times pi- or 3.14. With a quarter circle, we know the Radius- distance from the center point to the edge. Double that, and you have the diameter of a whole circle. Multiply that by pi, and you have the circumference of the whole circle- but since you have a quarter circle, divide that by 4. A 3 ft quarter- times 2= 6. 6x3.14= 18.84. divide THAT by 4=4.71. NOW add in the original radius for each of the two STRAIGHT sides- that is 3 x 2, or 6, PLUS the length of the curved part- 4.71, and you have 10.71 ft. So you have the length of the two straight sides, and the curving 3rd side combined.



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

How do you find the perimeter of a quarter circle? - Answers

We know that the circumference of a circle is equal to the diameter times pi- or 3.14. With a quarter circle, we know the Radius- distance from the center point to the edge. Double that, and you have the diameter of a whole circle. Multiply that by pi, and you have the circumference of the whole circle- but since you have a quarter circle, divide that by 4. A 3 ft quarter- times 2= 6. 6x3.14= 18.84. divide THAT by 4=4.71. NOW add in the original radius for each of the two STRAIGHT sides- that is 3 x 2, or 6, PLUS the length of the curved part- 4.71, and you have 10.71 ft. So you have the length of the two straight sides, and the curving 3rd side combined.

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      We know that the circumference of a circle is equal to the diameter times pi- or 3.14. With a quarter circle, we know the Radius- distance from the center point to the edge. Double that, and you have the diameter of a whole circle. Multiply that by pi, and you have the circumference of the whole circle- but since you have a quarter circle, divide that by 4. A 3 ft quarter- times 2= 6. 6x3.14= 18.84. divide THAT by 4=4.71. NOW add in the original radius for each of the two STRAIGHT sides- that is 3 x 2, or 6, PLUS the length of the curved part- 4.71, and you have 10.71 ft. So you have the length of the two straight sides, and the curving 3rd side combined.
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