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Holt CA Course 1 10-5 Area of Circles Warm Up Warm Up California Standards California Standards Lesson Presentation Lesson PresentationPreview.

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Presentation on theme: "Holt CA Course 1 10-5 Area of Circles Warm Up Warm Up California Standards California Standards Lesson Presentation Lesson PresentationPreview."— Presentation transcript:

1 Holt CA Course 1 10-5 Area of Circles Warm Up Warm Up California Standards California Standards Lesson Presentation Lesson PresentationPreview

2 Holt CA Course 1 10-5 Area of Circles Warm Up Simplify. 1. 8 2 2. 12 2 3. 6.2 2 4. 7.5 2 64 144 38.44 56.25

3 Holt CA Course 1 10-5 Area of Circles MG1.2 Know common estimates of  (3.14; ) and use these values to estimate and calculate the circumference and the area of circles; compare with actual measurements. Also covered: AF3.1, AF3.2, t MG1.1 California Standards 22 7

4 Holt CA Course 1 10-5 Area of Circles A circle can be cut into equal-sized sectors and arranged to resemble a parallelogram. The height h of the parallelogram is equal to the radius r of the circle, and the base b of the parallelogram is equal to one-half the circumference C of the circle. So the area of the parallelogram can be written as A = bh, or A = 1212 Cr. Since C = 2  r, A = 1212 (2  r)r =  r 2.

5 Holt CA Course 1 10-5 Area of Circles

6 Holt CA Course 1 10-5 Area of Circles Find the area of the circle by using a formula. Then use an estimate to check whether your answer is reasonable. Additional Example 1: Estimation Application A = r 2 A  3.14 · 3 2 A  3.14 · 9 A  28.26 square units Use the formula. Use 3.14 as an estimate for , and use 3 for r. Evaluate the power. Multiply.

7 Holt CA Course 1 10-5 Area of Circles Find the area of the circle by using a formula. then use an estimate to check whether your answer is reasonable. Additional Example 1 Continued 16 + 8 + ½(8) = 28 square units 16 squares are completely inside the circle. 8 squares are mostly inside the circle. Because 28 is close to 28.26, an answer of 28.26 square units is reasonable. Check Use the grid to estimate the area. 8 squares are halfway inside the circle.

8 Holt CA Course 1 10-5 Area of Circles Find the area of the circle by using a formula. then use an estimate to check whether your answer is reasonable. Check It Out! Example 1 A = r 2 A  3.14 · 2 2 A  3.14 · 4 A  12.56 Use the formula. Use 3.14 as an estimate for , and use 2 for r. Evaluate the power. Multiply.

9 Holt CA Course 1 10-5 Area of Circles Find the area of the circle by using a formula. then use an estimate to check whether your answer is reasonable. Check It Out! Example 1 Continued 4 + 8 + = 12 square units 4 squares are completely inside the circle. 8 squares are mostly inside the circle. Because 12 is close to 12.56, an answer of 12.56 square units is reasonable. Check Use the grid to estimate the area.

10 Holt CA Course 1 10-5 Area of Circles A. Find the area of the circle to the nearest tenth. Use 3.14 as an estimate for . Additional Example 2: Finding the Area of a Circle 7 cm A =  r 2 A  3.14 · 7 2 A  3.14 · 49 A  153.86 The area of the circle is about 153.9 cm 2. Use the formula. Substitute 7 for r. Evaluate the power. Multiply.

11 Holt CA Course 1 10-5 Area of Circles B. Find the area of the circle to the nearest tenth. Use 3.14 as an estimate for . Additional Example 2: Finding the Area of a Circle 18 ft A =  r 2 A  3.14 · 9 2 A  3.14 · 81 A  254.34 The area of the circle is about 254.3 ft 2. Use the formula. Substitute 9 for r. Evaluate the power. Multiply.

12 Holt CA Course 1 10-5 Area of Circles A. Find the area of the circle to the nearest tenth. Use 3.14 as an estimate for . 10 cm A =  r 2 A  3.14 · 10 2 A  3.14 · 100 A  314 The area of the circle is about 314 cm 2. Use the formula. Substitute 10 for r. Evaluate the power. Multiply. Check It Out! Example 2

13 Holt CA Course 1 10-5 Area of Circles B. Find the area of the circle to the nearest tenth. Use 3.14 as an estimate for . 12 ft A =  r 2 A  3.14 · 6 2 A  3.14 · 36 A  113.04 The area of the circle is about 113.0 ft 2. Use the formula. Substitute 6 for r. Evaluate the power. Multiply. Check It Out! Example 2

14 Holt CA Course 1 10-5 Area of Circles Park employees are fitting a top over a circular drain in the park. If the radius of the drain is 14 inches, what is the area of the top that will cover the drain? Use Additional Example 3: Application 22 7 as an estimate for . A =  r 2 A  22 7 ·14 2 A  22 7 · 196 A  22 · 28 A  616 The area of the top that will cover the drain is about 616 in 2. 1 28 Use the formula for the area of a circle. Substitute. Use 14 for r. Evaluate the power. Multiply.

15 Holt CA Course 1 10-5 Area of Circles 22 7 A =  r 2 A  22 7 ·72·72 A  22 7 · 49 A  22 · 7 A  154 1 7 Use the formula for the area of a circle. Substitute. Use 7 for r. Evaluate the power. Multiply. Check It Out! Example 3 Albert was designing a cover for a spa. If the radius of the spa is 7 ft, what is the area of the cover that will be made? Use as an estimate of . The area of the top that will cover spa is about 154 ft 2.

16 Holt CA Course 1 10-5 Area of Circles Lesson Quiz Find the area of each circle to the nearest tenth. Use 3.14 for . 1. 3. The bull’s-eye on a target has diameter 2 in. What is the area of the bull’s-eye to the nearest tenth? Use 3.14 for . 4. A round tablecloth has a radius of 36 in. What is the area of the table cloth? Use 3.14 for . Round your answer to the nearest tenth. 63.6 ft 2 201.0 ft 2 3.1 in 2 4,069.4 in 2 2. 8 ft9 ft


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