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from Math Quest. The answer is 1:2piWould you be able to include the source of this question? I have tried asking this question elsewhere but unfortunately, my attempt at getting an answer was unsuccessful. The main problem was that people were mostly confused about the wording of the question, i.e. they were unable to determine what the question exactly requires due to its rather "ambiguous" wording. I also saw your post on the Free Math Help forum and have posted a suggestion to your question there (still awaiting moderator approval, likely because it's my first message on that forum, meaning my suggestion may take some time to appear), which I'm not entirely sure of, but I still hope it helps!![]()
I don't think the area of the smaller circle is less than a sixth of the area of the larger circle so the solution 1:2pi cannot be the ratio of the two circles, although I do think solving that as a separate question would be quite interesting. As CM_Tutor has posted, there is a solution that requires one to computationally calculate the anglefrom Math Quest. The answer is 1:2pi
I think they want the area of the small circle to the large circle. But how would you work it out![]()