All SAT Mathematics Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Calculating Area & Circumference
A pizzeria measures its pizzas by their diameters when listing sizes on the menu. What is the difference, in square inches, in surface area between a 10-inch pizza and an 8-inch pizza from that pizzeria (assume that each pizza has a negligible height/thickness)?
An extremely important consideration on this problem is that the sizes are quoted in terms of the length of the diameter, but the area formula requires you to work with the radius. So as you calculate the area of each pizza, it is very important to first divide the diameter by 2 so that you are working with the radius in the formula .
10-inch pizza → radius of 5 → square inches
8-inch pizza → radius of 4 → square inches
Therefore the difference in surface area is square inches.
Example Question #471 : Sat Math
In the circle above, centered on point O, angle AOB measures 40 degrees. If line segment BD measures 18 inches, what is the measure, in inches, of minor arc BC?
To calculate an arc length, you need two pieces of information:
1) The circumference of the circle (calculated as or , where is the radius and is the diameter)
2) The measure of the central angle that connects the two end points of the arc.
Then the arc length is the proportion of the circumference represented by that angle: multiply by the circumference and you have the arc length.
Here you're given the diameter (via line segment BD) as 18, so you know that the circumference is . And you know that angle AOB measures 40 degrees, so you can conclude that angle BOC is 140 degrees, since angles AOB and BOC must complete the straight line AC and straight lines measure 180 degrees.
Therefore your calculation is , which simplifies to .
Example Question #1 : Calculating Area & Circumference
A bicycle tire has a diameter of 70 centimeters. Approximately how many revolutions does the tire make if the bicycle travels 1 kilometer? (1 kilometer = 1000 meters = 100000 centimeters)
900
1500
150
450
450
The distance around the outside of a circle is, of course, the circumference. A common way to test the circumference in a word problem is to use the circumference of a wheel as a straight line distance: for each revolution of the wheel, a vehicle will travel the length of the circumference.
Here you know that the diameter of the wheel is 70 centimeters, which means that the circumference, calculated as , is . Note that the question asks for "approximately" the number of revolutions, and that the answer choices are spread quite far apart. This means that you can use an estimate of 3.14 or for and say that one revolution moves the wheel approximately 220 centimeters. Since the wheel needs to cover 100000 centimeters, you should then divide 100000 centimeters by 220 to see that the answer is approximately 450.
Example Question #2 : Calculating Area & Circumference
If the circle above has center A and area , what is the perimeter of sector ABCD?
This problem tests several of the core properties of circles:
Area =
Circumference =
Arc length =
Here you're given the area, but to determine the perimeter of that sector you need to find the radius (for line segments AB and AD) and the arc length BCD. With an area of that means that the radius is 12. Since you need two radii (AB and AD) to form the "legs" of the sector, that means that the straight-line legs sum to 24 (a good hint that your correct answer should include the number 24).
For the arc length, note that the central angle measures 45, and that . So the arc BD will equal one-eighth of the circumference. The circumference is , so you can find the arc by calculating . Adding together the two legs plus the arc, you get your answer
Example Question #2 : Calculating Area & Circumference
In the figure above, AC is the diameter of a circle with center O. If the area of the circle is , what is the length of minor arc BC?
To calculate an arc length, such as the length of minor arc BC here, your job is to find the proportion that that arc represents out of the total circumference. So you'll need to find 1) the circumference and 2) the measure of the central angle of that arc.
Here since you know that the area is , you can use the formula to determine that the radius measures 9.
Then you can plug in that radius into the circumference formula, , to find that the circumference measures
From this point, you need to find the measure of angle BOC. Since angle AOC measures 180 degrees (you know that it's a straight line, because it's defined as a diameter), and angle AOB = 110, that means that BOC measures 70 degrees. So minor arc BC will be of the total circumference, setting up the calculation:
That reduces to which equals .
Example Question #3 : Calculating Area & Circumference
A gas pipe has an outside diameter of 24 inches. The steel wall of the pipe is 1 inch thick. What is the area of the cross-section of the steel wall of the pipe?
The cross section can be found by calculating the area of the larger, diameter 24, circle (inclusive of the pipe in gray) and subtracting the area of the smaller, diameter 22, circle (everything in white inside of the pipe). To do this, use the area formula: .
The radius of the larger circle is 12 and of the smaller circle is 11, meaning that your areas can be calculated as:
Outer/Larger Circle:
Inner/Smaller Circle:
Then subtract the areas and you'll be left with just the area of the gray ring:
Example Question #4 : Calculating Area & Circumference
On a certain circular dartboard, the diameter of the circular bullseye is 4 inches and the diameter of the entire board is 20 inches. If a dart hits the board in a random location, what is the probability that it hits the bullseye target?
While this problem asks about probability, it's essentially an area of a circle problem. The probability of hitting the bullseye is just the area of the bullseye divided by the area of the dartboard in total.
Since your job becomes to find the radius of each circle. You're quoted the diameters, so to find the radius just divide the diameter by 2.
Bullseye: Diameter = 4 so Radius = 2. Area =
Dartboard: Diameter = 20 so Radius = 10. Area =
So the probability of hitting the bullseye is which reduces to .
Example Question #2 : Calculating Area & Circumference
What is the area of a circle with a circumference of ?
This problem tests your ability to work with the two most important circle formulas (both given to you in your SAT test booklet). The circumference of a circle is , and the area of a circle is . Since you’re given the circumference of the circle as , you can set up an equation to solve for , the radius:
Then you can plug in 6 as the radius in the area formula:
Example Question #6 : Calculating Area & Circumference
The area of the semicircle above is . What is the length of the arc connecting points A and B?
This problem puts a slight twist on the area of a circle formula, . You’re given the area of half a circle as , so to apply the area formula you should double to account for the missing half of the circle so you can use the classic area formula. Since the area of the entire circle would be 64pi, you can use the area formula to solve for the radius:
So the radius is 8, which means you’re ready to apply the formula for circumference of a circle. But again, you’re only dealing with half the circumference since the problem asks for the arc length of the semicircle, so while the formula for circumference i s, you can cut that in half to find the distance of half the circumference. That means you need to calculate . With a radius of 8, that means that your answer is .
Example Question #7 : Calculating Area & Circumference
A circle has an area of . What is its circumference?
This problem tests your ability to work with the two most important circle formulas (both given to you in your SAT test booklet). The circumference of a circle is , and the area of a circle is . Since you’re given the area of the circle as , you can set up an equation to solve for , the radius:
Now you can plug in that radius of 12 into the circumference formula:
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