Perimeter/Area of Shaded Region within a Circle

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The discussion revolves around finding the area and perimeter of a shaded region within a circle, specifically involving a triangle inscribed in the circle. The initial approach of subtracting the triangle's area from the circle's area is deemed incorrect; instead, the area of the shaded region should be calculated using the formula for a circular segment. The correct perimeter calculation involves finding the minor arc length plus the base of the triangle. The central angle, given as 60 degrees, is crucial for determining both the arc length and the area of the sector. Ultimately, the area of the shaded region is derived from the sector's area minus the triangle's area, leading to the final expressions for both area and perimeter.
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Homework Statement


Find the area and perimeter of shared region in the following diagram:
upload_2016-12-8_23-38-46.png


Homework Equations


Area of shared Region =x/360 * PI * radius * radius
Perimeter of shared Region = x/360 * 2* PI* radius[/B]

The Attempt at a Solution


I am finding the area of circle & then subtracting the area of triangle to find the area of shared region:
Thus
A of circle = Pi * radius * radius
= 3.14 * 12 * 12
= 144 PI
A of Triangle (Note its an equilateral triangle) = sqr(s) * sqrt(3)/ 4 = 36 sqrt(3)
Therefore ans = 144PI - 36 sqrt(3) but this is a wrong answer.

Similarly perimeter of circle = 12 * 3 = 36
Circumference of circle = 2 * PI * radius
= 2* PI * 12
=24 PI
Therefore ans= 24PI - 36

Some body please guide me why my logic is not coreect.

Zulfi.
upload_2016-12-8_23-38-46.png
 
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zak100 said:
I am finding the area of circle & then subtracting the area of triangle to find the area of shared region:
That will not give you the area of the shaded region. If you added the area of the triangle to the area of the shaded region, which area will you get?
zak100 said:
Similarly perimeter of circle = 12 * 3 = 36
Circumference of circle = 2 * PI * radius
= 2* PI * 12
=24 PI
Therefore ans= 24PI - 36
That's not how you calculate perimeter. You need to find minor arc length+CD.

What is the formula for arc length which uses the given information in the diagram ?
 
Hi,
<That will not give you the area of the shaded region. If you added the area of the triangle to the area of the shaded region, which area will you get?>
Thanks for your response.
Is this not same as calculating area of Circle & then subtract the are of triangle from it. If not please guide me why?
<What is the formula for arc length which uses the given information in the diagram ?>
I gave all the formulae in the beginning:
Area of shared Region =x/360 * PI * radius * radius
Perimeter of shared Region = x/360 * 2* PI* radius


Some body please guide me.
Zulfi.
 
zak100 said:
<That will not give you the area of the shaded region. If you added the area of the triangle to the area of the shaded region, which area will you get?>
Thanks for your response.
Is this not same as calculating area of Circle & then subtract the are of triangle from it. If not please guide me why?
<What is the formula for arc length which uses the given information in the diagram ?>

path4136.png

This ^_^.
zak100 said:
I gave all the formulae in the beginning:
Area of shared Region =x/360 * PI * radius * radius
Perimeter of shared Region = x/360 * 2* PI* radius

What is x ?
 
zak100 said:
Hi,
<That will not give you the area of the shaded region. If you added the area of the triangle to the area of the shaded region, which area will you get?>
Thanks for your response.
Is this not same as calculating area of Circle & then subtract the are of triangle from it. If not please guide me why?
<What is the formula for arc length which uses the given information in the diagram ?>
I gave all the formulae in the beginning:
Area of shared Region =x/360 * PI * radius * radius
Perimeter of shared Region = x/360 * 2* PI* radius

Some body please guide me.
Zulfi.

There are formulas available for such areas; you just need to look them up on the internet, or look inside a textbook.

Hint: look up "circular segment".
 
Ray Vickson said:
There are formulas available for such areas; you just need to look them up on the internet, or look inside a textbook.

Hint: look up "circular segment".
He have enough information to find the area without formula.
 
Last edited:
Hi,
Thanks for your guidance. As you said perimeter is:
<You need to find minor arc length+CD>.
x/36 * 2* PI * radius + CD
Note x= 60 which is the central angle & is equal to the angle of arc?? (Is this correct?)
CD = 12 because its an equilateral triangle
60/360 * 2 * PI * 12 + 12
1/6* 2 PI * 12 + 12
4*PI + 12

Area of shaded region is:
Area of Sector COD - Area of triangle COD
60/360 * PI * RADIUS * RADIUS - 12 * 12 Sqrt(3)/4
1/6 * PI * 12 * 12 -36 sqrt(3)
24PI -36sqrt(3)
Since the shaded region is part of sector O so it is not needed to calculate area of circle.
Zulfi.
 
zak100 said:
Hi,
Thanks for your guidance. As you said perimeter is:
<You need to find minor arc length+CD>.
x/36 * 2* PI * radius + CD
Note x= 60 which is the central angle & is equal to the angle of arc?? (Is this correct?)
CD = 12 because its an equilateral triangle
60/360 * 2 * PI * 12 + 12
1/6* 2 PI * 12 + 12
4*PI + 12

Area of shaded region is:
Area of Sector COD - Area of triangle COD
60/360 * PI * RADIUS * RADIUS - 12 * 12 Sqrt(3)/4
1/6 * PI * 12 * 12 -36 sqrt(3)
24PI -36sqrt(3)
Since the shaded region is part of sector O so it is not needed to calculate area of circle.
Zulfi.
Looks good.
 
Buffu said:
He have enough information to find the area without formula.

But he HAS been using formulas---just the wrong ones.
 
  • #10
Try finding the area of the slice of the circle and subtract the area of the triangle
You have the angle so just try to find the right formulas to use
 
  • #11
Your calculation is far too unnecessarily complicated.
For the triangle, forget about the circle. Just take a triangle like that by itself.
Then for the <) shape, you have very probably seen processed cheeses (Philadelphia, Kraft are a couple of names to my knowledge) in a circular box. How many cheeses are there in one? :oldwink:
(Or at least cheesees in a box or a slice of a pie -no pun intended - looking like your diagram.)
 
Last edited:
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