The radius of Circle A is three feet less than

VorkDesegroorrta

VorkDesegroorrta

Answered question

2022-02-28

The radius of Circle A is three feet less than twice the diameter of Circle B. If the sum of the diameters of both circles is 49 feet, find the area and circumference of Circle A.

Answer & Explanation

Rebekah Irvine

Rebekah Irvine

Beginner2022-03-01Added 6 answers

Step 1
Let the radius and diameter of circle A be rA and dA respectively.
Let the radius and diameter of circle B be rB and dB respectively.
The diameter of circle B is three feet less than the radius of circle A, which indicates
rA=2dB3 (1)
49 feet is the combined diameter of both circles, which translates to
dA+dB=49 (2)
From the equation (2) we get,
dB=49dA
Substituting dB=49dA in equation (1)
rA=2(49dB)3
rA=982dA3
rA=952dA (3)
Step 2
We know that Radius=Diameter2
So, dA=2rA
Then the equation rA=952×2rA
rA=954rA
rA+4rA=95
rA=955
rA=19
Therefore the radius of the circle A is 19 feet
Step 3
Circumference of circle A=2πrA
Circumference of circle A=2×3.14×19 feet
Circumference of circle A=119.32 feet
Area of circle of A=πrA2
Area of circle A=3.14×192 feet
Area of circle A=1133.54 feet2

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