Circle Area

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Circle Area

by adi » Fri Mar 14, 2008 7:45 pm
The diameter of circle S is equal in length to a side of a square. The diameter of circle T is equal in length to a diagonal of the same square. The area of cricle T is how many times the area of circle S?

A) Square root of 2.
B) (Square root of 2) + 1
C) 2
D) pie, or 3.14....
E) Square root of 2(pie).

Answer should be C. I have the problem drawn out properly on the paper. I just don't know where to go from there.
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by simplyjat » Fri Mar 14, 2008 10:38 pm
No need for drawing the figure...
You need to know that if side of a square is x then diagonal is sqrt(2)*x..
And area of the circle is (pie*d^2)/4
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by tmmyc » Sat Mar 15, 2008 8:40 pm
Side of square: x
Diagonal of square: x*(sqrt 2)

Diameter of circle S: x
Radius of circle S: x/2
Area of circle S: pi*r^2 = pi*(x/2)^2 = pi*(x^2 / 4)

Diameter of circle T: x*(sqrt 2)
Radius of circle T: x*(sqrt 2)*(1/2)
Area of circle T: pi*r^2 = pi*[x*(sqrt 2)*(1/2)]^2 = pi*(x^2 / 2)

Area of circle T / Area of circle S

[pi*(x^2 / 2)] / [pi*(x^2 / 4)]

pi cancels
x^2 cancels

(1/2) / (1/4)
-> (1/2) * 4
--> 2

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by sampleresume » Tue Apr 08, 2008 7:40 pm
The answer is C.

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by BlindVision » Tue Aug 02, 2011 4:10 pm
tmmyc wrote:Side of square: x
Diagonal of square: x*(sqrt 2)

Diameter of circle S: x
Radius of circle S: x/2
Area of circle S: pi*r^2 = pi*(x/2)^2 = pi*(x^2 / 4)

Diameter of circle T: x*(sqrt 2)
Radius of circle T: x*(sqrt 2)*(1/2)
Area of circle T: pi*r^2 = pi*[x*(sqrt 2)*(1/2)]^2 = pi*(x^2 / 2)

Area of circle T / Area of circle S

[pi*(x^2 / 2)] / [pi*(x^2 / 4)]

pi cancels
x^2 cancels

(1/2) / (1/4)
-> (1/2) * 4
--> 2
Can someone please show me how:

pi*[x*(sqrt 2)*(1/2)]^2 BECOMES pi*(x^2 / 2)

How did the (sqrt 2) in the first numerator cancel out to BECOME x^2 in the second numerator??

I will be sure to give a THANKS to the first member that can help me fully comprehend the concept in question :-)
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by edge » Tue Aug 02, 2011 4:57 pm
Let a be the side of the square. Therefore, area of the original circle = (π/4)a²
The newer circle has a diameter of a√2. Its area = (π/4)(a√2)².

Their ratio = (√2)² = 2. Hence, C is the answer.

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by gmatboost » Tue Aug 02, 2011 5:10 pm
BlindVision wrote: Can someone please show me how:

pi*[x*(sqrt 2)*(1/2)]^2 BECOMES pi*(x^2 / 2)

How did the (sqrt 2) in the first numerator cancel out to BECOME x^2 in the second numerator??
Sure. The key is to remember to apply the exponent (in this case 2) to each term in the expression (in this case [x*(sqrt 2)*(1/2)]. I happened to blog about just this topic earlier today.

So, let's actually write out what happens when we apply the exponent:
[x*(sqrt 2)*(1/2)]^2 = [x*(sqrt 2)*(1/2)]*[x*(sqrt 2)*(1/2)

Now, let's pull the similar pieces together: x*x*(sqrt 2)*(sqrt 2)*(1/2)*(1/2)
x*x = x^2
sqrt(2) * sqrt(2) = 2
(1/2)*(1/2) = 1/4

Put it all together: (x^2)*2*(1/4) = (x^2)/2
Since the original expression was pi*[x*(sqrt 2)*(1/2)]^2, the final expression is pi*(x^2)/2

Having said that, there is a MUCH FASTER way to approach this question:
Once you determine that the ratio of diameter of T:diameter of S is root(2):1, you can immediately jump to the conclusion that the ratio of area of T:area of S is [root(2)]^2:[1^2], which is 2:1.

This is true because the ratio of the areas of two circles is always equal to the square of the ratio of any of their linear parts (e.g. radius, diameter, circumference).

This is true more broadly for any pair of similar figures, including any two squares (the linear parts could be side length, diagonal or perimeter), any two equilateral triangles (side length, perimeter, height), any two similar rectangles or triangles, etc.

Furthermore, if this were a solid geometry question, a similar fact would be true: the ratio of the volumes of two [spheres, cubes, similar rectangular prisms, etc.] is always equal to the cube (third power) of the ratio of any of their linear parts.

Hope this helps, let me know what you think.
Greg Michnikov, Founder of GMAT Boost

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by BlindVision » Tue Aug 02, 2011 7:05 pm
Thank you, Greg! I totally understand it now. Thank you for your time, and I will give "Thanks"!

Good luck on your GMAT venture...
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