asked 108k views
0 votes
A student claims that when you double the radius of a sector while keeping the measure of the central angle constant, then you double the area of the sector. Do you agree or disagree?

asked
User Nissan
by
8.1k points

1 Answer

5 votes

In order to find if the student is correct or not, let's analyze the formula for the area of a circular sector:


A=(r^2\theta)/(2)

Where r is the radius and theta is the central angle.

If the radius is doubled, since it is squared, the area will be multiplied by 4 instead of being doubled as well:


\begin{gathered} r^(\prime)=2r \\ A^(\prime)=(r^(\prime)^2\theta)/(2)=((2r)^2\theta)/(2)=(4r^2\theta)/(2)=4A \end{gathered}

Therefore we disagree with the student.

answered
User Giedre
by
8.5k points

No related questions found

Welcome to Qamnty — a place to ask, share, and grow together. Join our community and get real answers from real people.