area of circle is πr^2 why?
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The usual definition of pi is the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter, so that the circumference of a circle is pi times the diameter, or 2 pi times the radius. A circle can be cut and rearranged to closely resemble a parallelogram (with height r and base pi times r) of area pi times the square of the radius. By dividing the circle into more than eight slices, the approximation obtained in this manner would be even better. By dividing the circle into more and more slices, the approximating parallelograms approximate the area of the circle arbitrarily close. This give a geometric justification that the area of a circle really is "pi r squared".
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The usual definition of pi is the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter, so that the circumference of a circle is pi times the diameter, or 2 pi times the radius. A circle can be cut and rearranged to closely resemble a parallelogram (with height r and base pi times r) of area pi times the square of the radius. By dividing the circle into more than eight slices, the approximation obtained in this manner would be even better. By dividing the circle into more and more slices, the approximating parallelograms approximate the area of the circle arbitrarily close. This give a geometric justification that the area of a circle really is "pi r squared".
Plz mark it as BRAINLIEST.
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The height becomes equal to the radius, while the length is half of the circumference (C = 2πR) which now finds itself running along the top and bottom. As the number of triangles “approaches infinity” the circle can be taken apart and rearranged to fit almost perfectly into an “R by πR” box with an area of πR2.
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