Circular segment: Difference between revisions

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Arc length and area: arc length and area relation
 
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{{short description|SliceArea ofbounded by a circlecircular cutarc perpendicularand toa thestraight radiusline}}
[[Image:Circularsegment.svg|frame|right|A circular segment (in green) is enclosed between a secant/chord (the dashed line) and the arc whose endpoints equal the chord's (the arc shown above the green area).]]
 
In [[geometry]], a '''circular segment''' or '''disk segment''' (symbol: <span style="font-size:1.5em">⌓</span>), alsois knowna asregion of a [[disk (mathematics)|disk]]<ref>Mathematics distinguishes when necessary between the words ''circle''disk segmentand ''disk',': a disk is a regionplane ofarea having a [[diskcircle (mathematics)|disk]]as its boundary, while a circle is the closed curve forming the boundary itself.</ref> which is "cut off" from the rest of the disk by a straight line. The complete line is known as a ''[[secant line|secant]]'', orand the section inside the disk as a ''[[chord (geometry)|chord]]''.<ref>These Moreterms formally,refer a circular segment isto a regionline ofwhich [[two-dimensional space]] that is bounded byintersects a [[circularcurve. arc]]In (ofthis lesscase, than π radians by convention)the andcurve byis the [[circularcircle chord]] connectingforming the endpointsdisk's of the arcboundary.</ref>
 
More formally, a circular segment is a [[Plane (mathematics)|plane region]] bounded by a [[circular arc]] (of less than π radians by convention) and the [[circular chord]] connecting its endpoints.
 
== Formulae ==
Let ''R'' be the [[radius]] of the arc which forms part of the perimeter of the segment, ''θ'' the [[central angle]] subtending the arc in [[radian]]s, ''c'' the [[chord length]], ''s'' the [[arc length]], ''h'' the [[Sagitta (geometry)|sagitta]] ([[Height#In mathematics|height]]) of the segment, ''d'' the [[apothem]] of the segment, and ''a'' the [[area]] of the segment.
 
Usually, chord length and height are given or measured, and sometimes the arc length as part of the perimeter, and the unknowns are area and sometimes arc length. These can't be calculated simply from chord length and height, so two intermediate quantities, the radius and central angle are usually calculated first.
 
=== Radius and central angle ===
The radius is:
:<math>R = \tfrac{h}{2}+\tfrac{c^2}{8h}</math><ref>The fundamental relationship between <math>R</math>, <math>c</math>, and <math>h</math> derivable directly from the Pythagorean theorem among <math>R</math>, C<math>c/2</math>, and r<math>R-h</math> as components of a right-angled triangle is: <math>R^2=(\tfrac{c}{2})^2+(R-h)^2</math> which may be solved for <math>R</math>, <math>c</math>, or <math>h</math> as required.</ref>
 
The central angle is
:<math> \theta = 2\arcsin\tfrac{c}{2R}</math>
 
=== Chord length and height ===
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:<math>s = {\theta}R</math>
 
The area ''<math>a''</math> of the circular segment is equal to the area of the [[circular sector]] minus the area of the triangular portion (using the double angle formula to get an equation in terms of <math>\theta</math>):
 
:<math>a = \tfrac{R^2}{2} \left(\theta - \sin \theta\right)</math>
In terms of {{math|''c''}} and {{math|''R''}},
:<math>a = \tfrac{R^2}{2} \left(2\arcsin\tfrac{c}{2R} - \sin\left(2\arcsin\tfrac{c}{2R}\right)\right) = R^2\left(\arcsin\frac{c}{2R} - \frac{c}{2R}\sqrt{1-\left(\frac{c}{2R}\right)^2}\right)</math>
 
In terms of {{math|''R''}} and {{math|''h''}},
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:<math>a = R^2\arccos\left(1-\frac{h}{R}\right) - \left(R-h\right)\sqrt{R^2-\left(R-h\right)^2}</math>
 
In terms of {{math|''c''}} and {{math|''h''}},
Unfortunately, <math>a</math> is a [[transcendental function]] of <math>c</math> and <math>h</math> so no algebraic formula in terms of these can be stated. But what can be stated is that as the central angle gets smaller (or alternately the radius gets larger), the area ''a'' rapidly and asymptotically approaches <math>\tfrac{2}{3}c\cdot h</math>. If <math>\theta \ll 1</math>, <math>a = \tfrac{2}{3}c\cdot h</math> is a substantially good approximation.
 
:<math>a = \left(\frac{c^2+4h^2}{8h}\right)^2\arccos\left(\frac{c^2-4h^2}{c^2+4h^2}\right) - \frac{c}{16h}(c^2-4h^2)</math>
 
Unfortunately, <math>a</math> is a [[transcendental function]] of <math>c</math> and <math>h</math> so no algebraic formula in terms of these can be stated. But whatWhat can be stated is that as the central angle gets smaller (or alternately the radius gets larger), the area ''a'' rapidly and asymptotically approaches <math>\tfrac{2}{3}c\cdot h</math>. If <math>\theta \ll 1</math>, <math>a = \tfrac{2}{3}c\cdot h</math> is a substantially good approximation.
 
If <math>c</math> is held constant, and the radius is allowed to vary, then we have<math display="block">\frac{\partial a}{\partial s} = R</math>
 
As the central angle approaches π, the area of the segment is converging to the area of a [[semicircle]], <math>\tfrac{\pi R^2}{2}</math>, so a good approximation is a delta offset from the latter area:
 
:<math>a\approx \tfrac{\pi R^2}{2}-(R+\tfrac{c}{2})(R-h)</math> for h>.75''R''
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As an example, the area is one quarter the circle when ''θ'' ~ 2.31 radians (132.3°) corresponding to a height of ~59.6% and a chord length of ~183% of the radius.{{Clarify|date=December 2021|reason= A diagram with these numbers would be a good addition to the example}}
 
=== Etc.Other properties ===
The perimeter ''p'' is the arclength plus the chord length,:
 
:<math>p=c+s=c+\theta R</math>
Proportion of the whole area of the circle:
 
As a proportion of the whole area of the disc, <math>A= \pi R^2</math>, you have
 
:<math> \frac{a}{A}= \frac{\theta - \sin \theta}{2\pi}</math>
 
== Applications ==
The area formula can be used in calculating the volume of a partially-filled cylindrical tank layinglying horizontally.
 
In the design of windows or doors with rounded tops, ''c'' and ''h'' may be the only known values and can be used to calculate ''R'' for the draftsman's compass setting.
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To check hole positions on a circular pattern. Especially useful for quality checking on machined products.
 
For calculating the area or locating the centroid of a planar shape that contains circular segments.
 
== See also ==