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    Explain please Area of circle

    Math Problems
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    • The Blade DancerT
      The Blade Dancer M0★ M1★ M2★ M3★ M4 M5
      last edited by debbie

      Area of circle and stuff I am sooo confused about. Not really in any of the courses I've taken, but I've seen it and I'm confused.

      The Blade Dancer
      League of Legends, Valorant: Harlem Charades (#NA1)
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      • N
        nastya MOD M0 M1 M2 M3 M4 M5
        last edited by debbie

        Hi @The-Darkin-Blade!
        Nice to hear from you again!
        The area of circle is a veeery big topic for a small forum post. There are lots of articles about the formula of a circle's area and other things related to this topic! Hundreds! Even thousands!
        Your confusion is normal 🙂
        To learn more about it, you can start from here, or find more advanced information here.

        You can also imagine that a circle is a regular polygon with lots and lots of vertices (actually, infinitely many vertices). To find the area of a regular polygon, you cut it into isosceles triangles (see picture) and then sum up their areas. So the area of a polygon is equal to \(n\times(\frac{1}{2}ah)=\frac{h}{2}\times(na),\) where \(n\) - number of vertices, \(a\) - side length and \(h\) - distance from the center of polygon to its side. The term \(na\) is the perimeter of the polygon. As the polygon becomes more and more like a circle, this value approaches the value of the circle's circumference, which is \(2\pi r,\) and value of \(h\) approaches the circle radius. So, substituting \(2\pi r\) instead of \(na,\) we get: \(\text{area of circle}=\frac{r}{2}\times(2\pi r)=\pi r^2.\)
        Explain-please_.jpg

        Studying this in more detail and discovering lots of new and very interesting things will be easier as you get older and study higher-level topics like functions, derivatives, integrals, and many other things. 😉

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