Area & Circumference of Circles (AQA GCSE Maths)

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Area & Circumference

Why are circles different to other 2D shapes?

  • Circles are a shape that is made up of all the points on a 2D plane that are equidistant from a single point
    • Equidistant means the same distance
  • The circumference of a circle is its perimeter
  • π (pi) is the number (3.14159 …) that links a circle’s diameter to its circumference
  • You may be asked to give an area answer to a certain number of decimal places or significant figures
    • Alternatively you may be asked to give the exact value – or “give your answer in terms of π” – so this topic could crop up on the non-calculator paper!Diameter (d) is twice the radius (r)

How do I work with circles?

  • You must know the formulae for the area and circumference of a circle
  • There are two versions for the circumference and it is important not to get the radius and diameter confused
  • Remember that d = 2r

    But you may prefer to remember the formulae by having different letters involved

Circumference-Formulae, IGCSE & GCSE Maths revision notes

  • Working with circle formulae is just like working with any other formula:
    • WRITE DOWN – what you know (what you want to know)
    • Pick correct FORMULA
    • SUBSTITUTE and SOLVE

Exam Tip

  • If you’re under pressure and can’t remember which formula is which, remember that area is always measured in square units (cm2, m2 etc.) so the formula with r2 in it is the one for area
  • The circumference is just a length, so its units will be the same as for length (cm, m, etc)

Worked example

Find the area and perimeter of the semicircle shown in the diagram.

Give your answers in terms of pi.

Semicircle-d=16, IGCSE & GCSE Maths revision notes

 

The area of a semicircle is half the area of the full circle with the same diameter, so begin by finding the area of the full circle.

Find the radius by dividing the diameter by 2.

r space equals space 16 over 2 space equals space 8 space cm

Substitute this into the formula for the area of a circle A space equals space πr squared.
Leave your answer in terms of straight pi. (This just means do not multiply by straight pi). 

A subscript full space circle end subscript space equals space straight pi open parentheses 8 close parentheses squared space equals space 64 straight pi

Find the area of the semicircle by dividing the full area by 2.

A subscript semicircle space equals space 1 half open parentheses 64 straight pi close parentheses space equals space 64 over 2 straight pi space equals space 32 straight pi

Area = 32π cm2

The perimeter of the semicircle is made up of both the arc of the circle (half of the circumference) and the diameter of the semicircle.

Find the full length of the circumference of the circle using the formula  C space equals space 2 πr  (or C space equals space pi d).
Substitute the radius = 8 cm into the formula.
Again, leave your answer in terms of straight pi.

C space equals space 2 straight pi open parentheses 8 close parentheses space equals space 16 straight pi

Find the length of the arc (the curved part of the perimeter of the semicircle) by dividing the full area by 2.

Curved space length space equals space 1 half open parentheses 16 straight pi close parentheses space equals space 16 over 2 straight pi space equals space 8 straight pi

Find the full perimeter by adding this to the length of the diameter of the circle.

Perimeter = 8π + 16 cm

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Amber

Author: Amber

Amber gained a first class degree in Mathematics & Meteorology from the University of Reading before training to become a teacher. She is passionate about teaching, having spent 8 years teaching GCSE and A Level Mathematics both in the UK and internationally. Amber loves creating bright and informative resources to help students reach their potential.