Circles & Area

The perfect shape — and the formulas for measuring every kind of region.

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

Circle Basics

A circle is the set of all points equidistant from a center point. This distance is the radius r.

Circumference: C = 2πr
Area: A = πr²
Equation: (x − h)² + (y − k)² = r²   (center (h,k), radius r)

The circle equation is a conic section — one of the four curves obtained by slicing a cone. The constant π ≈ 3.14159 appears throughout mathematics; see the formula sheet for its properties.

Arcs, Sectors & Segments

Arc length: s = rθ   (θ in radians)
Sector area: A = ½r²θ
Segment area: A = ½r²(θ − sin θ)

These formulas use radians — the natural angle measure for trigonometry and calculus. One full revolution = 2π radians = 360°.

Example: Arc length for θ = π/3 on r = 6

s = 6 · π/3 = 2π ≈ 6.28

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

Inscribed Angles

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

An angle inscribed in a circle (vertex on the circumference) is half the central angle that subtends the same arc:

Inscribed angle = ½ × central angle

Special case: An inscribed angle that subtends a semicircle is always 90° — Thales' theorem. This ancient result connects circles to right triangles.

Area Formulas

A comprehensive reference for all 2D shapes (also on the formula sheet):

Rectangle: A = lw
Triangle: A = ½bh  or  A = ½ab·sin(C) — uses trig
Parallelogram: A = bh
Trapezoid: A = ½(b₁ + b₂)h
Regular polygon (n sides, side s): A = (ns²)/(4·tan(π/n))
Circle: A = πr²
Ellipse: A = πab
The area of a circle can be derived using integration: A = ∫₋ᵣ ʳ 2√(r² − x²) dx = πr². This is one of the first applications of integral calculus to geometry.

Volume & Surface Area

Rectangular prism: V = lwh,   SA = 2(lw + lh + wh)
Cylinder: V = πr²h,   SA = 2πrh + 2πr²
Cone: V = ⅓πr²h,   SA = πr√(r² + h²) + πr²
Sphere: V = (4/3)πr³,   SA = 4πr²
Pyramid: V = ⅓Bh (B = base area)

The volume formulas for cones and pyramids (with the ⅓ factor) can be proved rigorously using integral calculus. Archimedes originally derived the sphere volume using a brilliant geometric argument — one of the greatest achievements of ancient mathematics.

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
In linear algebra, the determinant of a matrix gives the volume scaling factor of the associated linear transformation. A 3×3 matrix with determinant 2 doubles all volumes. This connects geometric volume to algebraic structure.