asked 125k views
21 votes
Find the area of the blue region :) ​

Find the area of the blue region :) ​-example-1
asked
User Iaasgeek
by
8.0k points

1 Answer

11 votes


\textit{area of a sector of a circle}\\\\ A=\cfrac{\theta \pi r^2}{360} ~~ \begin{cases} r=radius\\ \theta =\stackrel{degrees}{angle}\\[-0.5em] \hrulefill\\ A=27.93\\ \theta =50 \end{cases}\implies 27.93=\cfrac{(50)\pi r^2}{360}\implies 27.93=\cfrac{5\pi r^2}{36} \\\\\\ 27.93(36)=5\pi r^2\implies \cfrac{27.93(36)}{5\pi }=r^2\implies \sqrt{\cfrac{27.93(36)}{5\pi }}=r

since now we know what the radius of the circle is, le's get the area of the whole circle and subtract the orange sector from it, what's leftover is the part we didn't subtract, namely the blue shaded area.


\textit{area of a circle}\\\\ A=\pi r^2\hspace{5em}A=\pi \left( \sqrt{\cfrac{27.93(36)}{5\pi }} \right)^2\implies A=\cfrac{27.93(36)}{5} \\\\[-0.35em] ~\dotfill\\\\ \stackrel{\textit{\LARGE Areas}}{\stackrel{whole~circle}{\cfrac{27.93(36)}{5}}~~ - ~~\stackrel{orange~sector}{27.93}}\implies 201.096~~ - ~~27.93 ~~ \stackrel{\textit{blue shaded area}}{\approx ~~ 173.17}

answered
User Nap
by
8.9k 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.