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Attributes of Circles
6371 Views

This video can run circles around other videos about circles. Sir Cumference, of Round Table fame, explains all the properties of… well, circles....

1
Perimeter and Circumference
10658 Views

It's super useful to be able to find the distance around stuff. Like when you’re being pursued by authorities while running around the base of an...

2
Area of a Sector
2667 Views

Time to learn about the area of a sector. And no, that's not the sector's bedroom with a bumper sticker on the door that reads, "GO AWAY."

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SAT Math 7.4 Geometry and Measurement 205 Views


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Description:

SAT Math 7.4 Geometry and Measurement


Transcript

00:02

Here’s your shmoop du jour, brought to you by a midpoint.

00:06

Apparently, it has some kind of restraining order against the circumference.

00:17

F is the midpoint of DG and E is the midpoint of FD.

00:21

What is the ratio of the area of the circle with center E to the area of the circle with center G?

00:29

Here are the potential answers...

00:33

Okay, so we’ve got three circles here…and we want to know how many of the itty-bitty

00:37

circles we could fit inside the big circle.

00:40

Well, all right…to be more technically accurate, we want a ratio of the area.

00:45

And all we can use to get there is a couple of midpoints.

00:48

These guys had better be good. Okay… here’s another problem where we’re

00:48

going to have to go ahead and just call something “x.”

00:48

In this case, we know that ED is a radius of the smallest circle… so we’ll call

00:53

that guy “x.”

00:54

That would make FD, the smallest circle's diameter, 2x.

00:59

And, because FD is also a radius of the medium circle…GD is going to be 4x.

01:05

Now that we have our radii, it’s time to whip out the formula for the area of a circle,

01:09

and go to work… For our smallest circle, we’ll take the formula

01:13

Area equals pi times r squared and plug in our… r…

01:20

…to get pi x squared.

01:22

For the big circle, we get pi times the quantity 4x… squared… or pi sixteen x squared.

01:28

We’re looking for the ratio, which is always the same as a fraction…

01:32

…and in this case is pi times x squared over pi times sixteen x squared.

01:38

The pi and the x squared cancel out…leaving us with just 1 over 16…

01:43

…which is equivalent to option A.

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