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Circular Measure Notes 2012

The document discusses measuring angles in radians and degrees, finding arc lengths and areas of sectors and segments of circles using formulas involving the radius and central angle. It provides examples of converting between radians and degrees, finding arc lengths and areas when given the radius and central angle. One example application problem calculates the area and perimeter of a keyhole figure made of circular and triangular sections.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
842 views5 pages

Circular Measure Notes 2012

The document discusses measuring angles in radians and degrees, finding arc lengths and areas of sectors and segments of circles using formulas involving the radius and central angle. It provides examples of converting between radians and degrees, finding arc lengths and areas when given the radius and central angle. One example application problem calculates the area and perimeter of a keyhole figure made of circular and triangular sections.

Uploaded by

C Dzirutwe
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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1.

1 Measuring Angles in Radians

“A radian is the angle subtended at the centre of a circle by an arc length whose length is equal to
that of the radius of the circle”. This means a radian is the angle formed when the arc length and
the radius are the same.

The number of radians in a circle = length of circumference


Length of radius
2r
=
r
= 2

 360 = 2 rads

180 =  rads
180
1 rad =  57·3

1.2 Changing Degrees to Radians


Multiply by
Rule:- 180

Example 1. Convert 45° to radians


 45
45  = Leave your answer in
180 180 terms of  unless asked
 for more accuracy
=
4

Example 2. Convert 75° to radians, give your answer to 2sf.


 75
75  =
180 180
= 1·308996
= 1·3 (2sf)

1.3 Changing Radians to Degrees

180
Multiply by
Rule: 
2
Example 1. Convertrads to degress
3
2 180
 = 120
3 
c
Example 2. Convert 20·1 to degrees
180
2·1  = 120·3

1.4 Finding Arc Lengths

The length of an arc is always proportional to the angle at the centre of the arc and the radius of the
arc. If 2 arcs have the same radius but one has an angle twice the size of the other, it means one arc
length will be twice the size of the other.

l
2l

Formula for finding an arc length: – l = r where l = arc length,


r = radius
 = angle at the centre

l  Length of arc = angle at the centre


=
2r 2 Circumference total angle at centre
2r
(  2r) l=
2
Ratio of sides = Ratio of angles
l = r

Example 1. Find the length of the arc ABC.

2
l = r r = 5cm  =
3
2
l=5
3
10
l= or 10·47cm
3
Example 2. Find the radius of the sector ABC

5
l = r r = 16cm  =
4
5
16 = r 
4
4
16  =r
5
64
= r or r = 4·07cm
5

Example 3. An arc AB or a circle, with centre o and radius r cm, subtends an angle of θ
radians at O. The perimeter of the sector AOB is P cm.
Express r in terms of θ.

p = (2  radius) + arc length


p = 2r + r
p
+=r
2

1.5 Finding the Area of a Sector

1 2
A= r  where r = radius ,  = angle at centre
Formula for area of a sector is 2

A 
2
= Area of Sector = angle at the centre
r 2 Area of circle total angle at centre
2  2
(  r ) A=  r
2
2 Ratio of areas = Ratio of angles
r 1 2
A= or A = r 
2 2

Important : If the question gives the angle at the centre in degrees it must be changed to radians

Example 1. Find the area of the sector ABC, where ABC = and r = 2cm,
3
give your answer in terms of 
1 2 
A= r  where r = 2cm,  =
2 3
1 
A= 22
2 3

2 2
A= cm
3

Example 2. Find the area of the sector ABC, where ABC = 60 and r = 8cm, give your answer to 3sf

60 = 60 
180

=
3

1 2 
A= r  where  = , r = 8cm
2 3
.
1 
A= 88
2 3
32
A=
3
2
A = 33·5 cm (2sf)

1.6 Finding the Area of a Segment

Formula for the area of a segment:-

1 2 1 2
A= r  – r Sin 
2 2

1 2
or A = r ( – sin ) where r = radius,  = angle at centre
2

1
area of a triangle =
ab sin C
Note : 2 , as a = b = r, ab = r2
Area of segment = Area of sector – area of a triangle

1 2 1
Area of segment  r   r 2 sin 
2 2

Example 1. Find the area of the shaded segment.


1 2 
A= r ( – sin) where r = 9cm and  =
2 6

1 2    
A= 9  – sin 
2  6 6 

A = 40·5  (0·023598775)
A = 0·95575 (5sf)

1.7Application of circular measure

Example 1:

The figure ABCQP represents a key hole.  ABC is part of a circle centre O and radius
4 mm.  OPQ is an isosceles triangle and AP = 12 mm.  Given that ,
calculate the area and perimeter of the key hole.
 

Solution:
Area = 0.5 ( 2π −0 .541592653 ) (16)+0.5(16 )(16 )sin(0 .541592653 )−0.5(4 )( 4)sin (0.541592653)
= 111 mm2

Perimeter = 4 ( 2 π −0 .541592653 ) +12+12+6.42


= 53.4 mm2

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