What is the area of this part of a circle?

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The discussion revolves around finding the area of a specific segment of a circle, with participants exploring various methods to solve the problem. Initial attempts to use standard formulas for circles were deemed ineffective due to the unique nature of the segment in question. A more efficient approach was proposed, involving geometric reflections to simplify the calculation and identify the center of the circle. Participants noted that while trigonometry could be applied, the problem could also be resolved through visualization and geometric properties. Ultimately, the conversation highlights the importance of creative problem-solving in geometry.
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Homework Statement



the figure is shown on the attachment. Find the area of the smallest part of the circle.

Homework Equations



area of circle, sector, segment

The Attempt at a Solution



I cannot use the said equations since the part of the circle is not with reference to the center. I cannot think also of any formulas for this kind of problem.

Please help.
 

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Consider that part as a part of another circle whose radius is 7. :wink:
 
I already did that but the resulting answer is not the same with the given answer.
 
Pranav-Arora said:
Consider that part as a part of another circle whose radius is 7. :wink:

Are you sure? :wink:
 
kaizokonpaku said:
I already did that but the resulting answer is not the same with the given answer.

Can you show us your steps and calculations?

Infinitum said:
Are you sure?
Not quite, but let me check it out once more.
 
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If that is another circle, then the area would be a quarter circle
A = (pi)(7^2) / 4 = 38.48. however, the given answer is 31.
 
Your first step should be to demonstrate that the corner of that square lies at the centre of the large circle.
 
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I do not get the first step.
 
kaizokonpaku said:
the given answer is 31.
Lest anyone be misled into thinking this apparently is an easy problem you can solve in your head ... :frown:

You do need some trig and a calculator, and the answer is not an integer. I get 31.0126
 
  • #10
kaizokonpaku said:
I do not get the first step.

This can be done the hard way, or a very easy way.

Hard way: use trig to find certain angles, then prove that a geometric property of a circle (angle subtended by a chord at circumference = half angle subtended at centre). I was mucking around with this for a few minutes (and actually did it) before inspiration struck and I found the easy way.

Easy way: Reflect the figure vertically and superimpose the mirror images (getting two vertically stacked 5X5 squares). Now reflect that figure laterally, and superimpose the mirror images (to get four 5X5 squares). You will find that, with the dimensions given, one vertex of each of those squares will exactly touch the others, proving that that is the centre.

Now, after you've done that, the easiest way to find the required area is to visualise it as the sum of areas of a segment and a right triangle. Determining the angle subtended by the segment requires a little trig, but nothing too difficult.
 
  • #11
Curious3141 said:
This can be done the hard way, or a very easy way.

Hard way: use trig to find certain angles, then prove that a geometric property of a circle (angle subtended by a chord at circumference = half angle subtended at centre). I was mucking around with this for a few minutes (and actually did it) before inspiration struck and I found the easy way.

I did this. Couldn't post about it because I had to go out :frown: The answer doesn't come out to be exact, as NascentOxygen pointed out.

Easy way: Reflect the figure vertically and superimpose the mirror images (getting two vertically stacked 5X5 squares). Now reflect that figure laterally, and superimpose the mirror images (to get four 5X5 squares). You will find that, with the dimensions given, one vertex of each of those squares will exactly touch the others, proving that that is the centre.

Now, after you've done that, the easiest way to find the required area is to visualise it as the sum of areas of a segment and a right triangle. Determining the angle subtended by the segment requires a little trig, but nothing too difficult.

Interesting method, Curious(10^3)Pi! :smile:
 
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  • #12
Infinitum said:
Interesting method, Curious(10^3)Pi! :smile:

Thanks, but I only found it because I'm always trying to find the lazy way out. :-p
 
  • #13
I solved it and I got it using the easy way. Thanks for the help :)
 
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