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As proved by my good friend Archimedes, in his _Measurement of a Circle_, the area enclosed by a circle is equal to that of a triangle whose base has the length of the circle's circumference & whose height equals the circle's radius, which comes to π multiplied by the radius squared: Area = pi r^2. Equivalently, denoting diameter by _d_ Area =pi d^2/4 approx 0.7854d^2, that is,                               approximately           79% of the circumscribing square whose side is of length _d_ The circle is the plane curve enclosing the maximum area for a given arc length. This relates the circle to a problem in the calculus of variations, namely the isoperimetric inequality [of course]
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Sep 1, 2018
Sep 1, 2018 at 6:54 PM UTC
Archimedes is a friend of mine
As proved by my good friend Archimedes, in his _Measurement of a Circle_, the area enclosed by a circle is equal to that of a triangle whose base has the length of the circle's circumference & whose height equals the circle's radius, which comes to π multiplied by the radius squared: Area = pi r^2. Equivalently, denoting diameter by _d_ Area =pi d^2/4 approx 0.7854d^2, that is,                               approximately           79% of the circumscribing square whose side is of length _d_ The circle is the plane curve enclosing the maximum area for a given arc length. This relates the circle to a problem in the calculus of variations, namely the isoperimetric inequality [of course]
johnny-noiπ
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Sep 1, 2018
Sep 1, 2018 at 6:54 PM UTC
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