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A single slice cut from the center of a circular pizza has a [#permalink]
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AjanthaJ wrote:
DFXR

Hi

I am not able to get the idea behind this

Area of the six 6 inch diameter pizzas=6/2=r=3; 3^2π*6=54π; 54π/6.25π=8.64

D = 6, r= 3, so area must be Pi r*r. so Pi*3*3 = 9 pi . why is it again multiplied by 6 and is 54pi?

pls help.


It might be easier to consider this as a simple ratio problem from the total servings based on area.

First determine the full area of the original pizza with a radius of 5 as 25π and its circumference as 10π.
Since the arc length of a 4 ounce slice is 5/4π, double the ratio to determine that an 8 ounce slice will have an arc length of 5/2π or 2.5π
Then, 2.5π = 1/4 of the circumference, so an 8 ounce slice, which is equal to one serving, will have an area of 25/4π or 6.25π.

Now, the six pizzas with a radius of 3 each will all have areas of 9π for a total of 9π × 6 = 54π.
Then, that 54π area must be divided into 6.25π area 8 ounce servings.
Use the provided calculator to determine that 54π / 6.25π = 8.64 servings.

However, the problem dictates that all servings may only be counted as such if they are 8 ounces in full weight.
Therefore, the remaining .64 serving doesn't count and the correct number of servings from the six small pizzas is 8.

Hope this helps!
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Re: A single slice cut from the center of a circular pizza has a [#permalink]
MyGuruStefan

Thanks for the detailed explanation. I missed reading the SIX 6" inches diameter pizza. I thought it was a single pizza with a diameter of 6 inches.
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Re: A single slice cut from the center of a circular pizza has a [#permalink]
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