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  2. Circumference - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circumference

    In geometry, the circumference (from Latin circumferens, meaning "carrying around") is the perimeter of a circle or ellipse. [ 1] The circumference is the arc length of the circle, as if it were opened up and straightened out to a line segment. [ 2] More generally, the perimeter is the curve length around any closed figure.

  3. Area of a circle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Area_of_a_circle

    The area of a regular polygon is half its perimeter multiplied by the distance from its center to its sides, and because the sequence tends to a circle, the corresponding formula–that the area is half the circumference times the radius–namely, A = ⁠ 1 2 ⁠ × 2πr × r, holds for a circle.

  4. Pi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pi

    The first computational formula for π, based on infinite series, was discovered a millennium later. [1] [2] The earliest known use of the Greek letter π to represent the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter was by the Welsh mathematician William Jones in 1706. [3]

  5. Circumcircle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circumcircle

    Circumcircle. In geometry, the circumscribed circle or circumcircle of a triangle is a circle that passes through all three vertices. The center of this circle is called the circumcenter of the triangle, and its radius is called the circumradius. The circumcenter is the point of intersection between the three perpendicular bisectors of the ...

  6. Circle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circle

    Circumference: the length of one circuit along the circle, or the distance around the circle. Diameter: a line segment whose endpoints lie on the circle and that passes through the centre; or the length of such a line segment. This is the largest distance between any two points on the circle. It is a special case of a chord, namely the longest ...

  7. Measurement of a Circle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Measurement_of_a_Circle

    Measurement of a Circle or Dimension of the Circle ( Greek: Κύκλου μέτρησις, Kuklou metrēsis) [ 1] is a treatise that consists of three propositions, probably made by Archimedes, ca. 250 BCE. [ 2][ 3] The treatise is only a fraction of what was a longer work. [ 4][ 5]

  8. Unit circle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unit_circle

    Because PQ has length y 1, OQ length x 1, and OP has length 1 as a radius on the unit circle, sin(t) = y 1 and cos(t) = x 1. Having established these equivalences, take another radius OR from the origin to a point R(−x 1,y 1) on the circle such that the same angle t is formed with the negative arm of the x-axis.

  9. List of formulas in elementary geometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_formulas_in...

    The basic quantities describing a sphere (meaning a 2-sphere, a 2-dimensional surface inside 3-dimensional space) will be denoted by the following variables r {\displaystyle r} is the radius, C = 2 π r {\displaystyle C=2\pi r} is the circumference (the length of any one of its great circles ),