What is the Formula for Finding the Area of a Circular Coil?

ikentrovik
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Homework Statement



Please see attached image file

I understand everything in this problem except I don't know how they got (1/4) in the area of a coil.

Can someone explain this? I have googled it and I am not getting a clear answer.

I thought the area of a coil could be (pi(r)^2)L where l is the length. But wouldn't this be a cyclinder? How would I find it when the inner core of the cyclinder is missing?

Thank you
 

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The coil is circular. The area of a circle is ##\pi r^2## and r is half of the diameter. The expression you gave is not an area, it has dimensions length^3.
 
You are right. I guess I gace volume. What I really don't understand is why there is a (1/4). Could you please explain why? Thank you.
 
Orodruin said:
The area of a circle is ##\pi r^2## and r is half of the diameter.

r = d/2 implies r^2 = d^2/4 ...
 
Oh ok thank you! What I did was divide the diameter in half right away. Thats why I was confused.
 
To solve this, I first used the units to work out that a= m* a/m, i.e. t=z/λ. This would allow you to determine the time duration within an interval section by section and then add this to the previous ones to obtain the age of the respective layer. However, this would require a constant thickness per year for each interval. However, since this is most likely not the case, my next consideration was that the age must be the integral of a 1/λ(z) function, which I cannot model.

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