Or search by topic
Well done Kang Hong Joo from the Chinese High School, Singapore; Lucinda Hearth from Stamford High School; Jessica Zhang; Matthew Hodgetts from King Edward VI Camp Hill School, Birmingham; Tom Davie and Michael Grey from Madras College, St. Andrews.
Case 1: a semicircle
Let the radius of the inner circle be $r$; then its area is $\pi{r^2}$. The area of the semicircle is $\pi(2r)^2/2$, which is $2\pi{r^2}$. The percentage of the semicircle covered by the inner circle is 50\%.
Case 2: a quadrant
The area of the inner circle is $\pi{r^2}$; the radius of the
quadrant is $r(1 + \sqrt{2})$, and the area of the quadrant is
$$\frac{1}{4}\pi{r^2}(1 + \sqrt{2})^2 = \frac{1}{4}\pi{r^2}(3 +
2\sqrt{2})$$ Therefore $$\frac{\text{area of inner
circle}}{\text{area of quadrant}} = \frac{4}{3 + \sqrt{2}} =
68.6\%$$
Case 3: a sector of angle
$2\alpha$
a | 30 o | 45 o | 60 o | 90 o |
Ratio (nearest 1%) |
67% | 69% | 65% | 50% |
If the base of a rectangle is increased by 10% and the area is unchanged, by what percentage is the width decreased by ?
Equal circles can be arranged so that each circle touches four or six others. What percentage of the plane is covered by circles in each packing pattern? ...