Finding the Center of Gravity of a Pizza with a Missing Slice

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To find the center of gravity of a pizza with a missing slice, first calculate the center of mass of the entire pizza, which is at the center. Then, determine the center of mass of the removed circular piece, which is located at a distance of R/2 from the center. The total mass of the pizza is the area of the full pizza minus the area of the removed slice. The formula for the center of mass is Xcom = (m1x1 + m2x2) / (total mass), where m1 is the mass of the pizza and m2 is the mass of the removed piece. The resulting distance from the original center to the new center of gravity is R/6.
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Here is my question I'm not sure even how to come up with the answer:

A circular pizza of radius R has a circular piece of radious R/2 removed from one side. The center of gravity has moved from C to C' along the x axos. Show that the distance from C to C' is R/6. Assume the thickness and density of the pizza are uniform throughout.

If anyone could give me some pointers they would be greatly appreciated.
 
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Find the center of mass of the pizza (in the center, obviously) and then find the center of mass of the removed piece.

Xcom = (m1x1 + m2X2) / (total mass)

If the pizza has density d, then the total area must be R^2*pi - (R/2)^2*pi. This goes in the denominator. Now you simply find the center of mass of the removed piece, which should be (R/2)^2*pi. Multiply this by R/2 (the distance to the center). I hope that helps some.
 
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