Answer:
Given: circle
diameter = 10 cm => radius (R) = 5 cm
Find: measure of angle bounding sector = 11 π sq. cm.
Plan: determine what part of the circle’s total area equals the sector’s area.
Total Area of Circle A = π R^2 = π 5^2 = 25 π sq. cm.
Therefore: Sector Area = 11 π cm^2/25 π cm^2 = 11/25
Since the sector is 11/25 th of the circles area, the sector angle will measure 11/25 th of the circle’s circumference. They are proportional.
C = 2 π R = 2 π (5) = 10 π cm
Sector Arc = measure of sector angle = 11/25 (10 π) =
22π/5 radians
Answer: Sector Arc = 22π/5 Radians
Answer:
Option B:

Step-by-step explanation:
Given
Centre = (h,k) = (4,1)
Radius = r = 2
The standard equation of circle is:

Putting the values of h,k and r

Hence, the correct option is option B

<h3>
Answer: 1</h3>
Explanation:
The original expression is the same as
since 
The degree of any polynomial is always the largest exponent. This applies to single variable polynomials only.
Therefore, the degree of
is 1. This is a linear polynomial, and it's also a binomial since it has 2 terms 17x and 4.
-- You have two angles.
-- They're complementary . . . they add up to 90 degrees.
-- One is 4 times as big as the other one.
___________________________________________
-- The smaller angle has 1 share of the 90 degrees.
-- The bigger angle has 4 shares of the 90 degrees.
-- (The smaller one is 1/4 the size of the bigger one.
The bigger one is 4 times the size of the smaller one.)
-- When you add them together, you get 5 shares, totaling 90 degrees.
-- What's the size of each share ? It's 90/5 = 18 degrees.
-- The smaller angle gets one share . . . 18 degrees.
-- The bigger angle gets 4 shares. (4 x 18) = 72 degrees.
____________________________________
Check:
-- Is the small one 1/4 the size of the big one ? 18/72 = 1/4 Yes.
-- Are they complementary ? Do they add up to 90 degrees ?
18 + 72 = 90 Yes.
yay !