Circumference

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Short description: Perimeter of a circle or ellipse
  circumference C
  diameter D
  radius R
  center or origin O
Circumference = π × diameter = 2π × radius.

In geometry, the circumference (from Latin circumferens, meaning "carrying around") is the perimeter of a circle or ellipse.[1] The circumference is the arc length of the circle, as if it were opened up and straightened out to a line segment.[2] More generally, the perimeter is the curve length around any closed figure. Circumference may also refer to the circle itself, that is, the locus corresponding to the edge of a disk. The circumference of a sphere is the circumference, or length, of any one of its great circles.

Circle

The circumference of a circle is the distance around it, but if, as in many elementary treatments, distance is defined in terms of straight lines, this cannot be used as a definition. Under these circumstances, the circumference of a circle may be defined as the limit of the perimeters of inscribed regular polygons as the number of sides increases without bound.[3] The term circumference is used when measuring physical objects, as well as when considering abstract geometric forms.

When a circle's diameter is 1, its circumference is [math]\displaystyle{ \pi. }[/math]
When a circle's radius is 1—called a unit circle—its circumference is [math]\displaystyle{ 2\pi. }[/math]

Relationship with π

The circumference of a circle is related to one of the most important mathematical constants. This constant, pi, is represented by the Greek letter [math]\displaystyle{ \pi. }[/math] The first few decimal digits of the numerical value of [math]\displaystyle{ \pi }[/math] are 3.141592653589793 ...[4] Pi is defined as the ratio of a circle's circumference [math]\displaystyle{ C }[/math] to its diameter [math]\displaystyle{ d: }[/math] [math]\displaystyle{ \pi = \frac{C}{d}. }[/math]

Or, equivalently, as the ratio of the circumference to twice the radius. The above formula can be rearranged to solve for the circumference: [math]\displaystyle{ {C} = \pi \cdot{d} = 2\pi \cdot{r}.\! }[/math]

The ratio of the circle's circumference to its radius is called the circle constant, and is equivalent to [math]\displaystyle{ 2\pi }[/math]. The value [math]\displaystyle{ 2\pi }[/math] is also the amount of radians in one turn. The use of the mathematical constant π is ubiquitous in mathematics, engineering, and science.

In Measurement of a Circle written circa 250 BCE, Archimedes showed that this ratio ([math]\displaystyle{ C/d, }[/math] since he did not use the name π) was greater than 310/71 but less than 31/7 by calculating the perimeters of an inscribed and a circumscribed regular polygon of 96 sides.[5] This method for approximating π was used for centuries, obtaining more accuracy by using polygons of larger and larger number of sides. The last such calculation was performed in 1630 by Christoph Grienberger who used polygons with 1040 sides.

Ellipse

Circumference is used by some authors to denote the perimeter of an ellipse. There is no general formula for the circumference of an ellipse in terms of the semi-major and semi-minor axes of the ellipse that uses only elementary functions. However, there are approximate formulas in terms of these parameters. One such approximation, due to Euler (1773), for the canonical ellipse, [math]\displaystyle{ \frac{x^2}{a^2} + \frac{y^2}{b^2} = 1, }[/math] is [math]\displaystyle{ C_{\rm{ellipse}} \sim \pi \sqrt{2\left(a^2 + b^2\right)}. }[/math] Some lower and upper bounds on the circumference of the canonical ellipse with [math]\displaystyle{ a\geq b }[/math] are:[6] [math]\displaystyle{ 2\pi b \leq C \leq 2\pi a, }[/math] [math]\displaystyle{ \pi (a+b) \leq C \leq 4(a+b), }[/math] [math]\displaystyle{ 4\sqrt{a^2+b^2} \leq C \leq \pi \sqrt{2\left(a^2+b^2\right)}. }[/math]

Here the upper bound [math]\displaystyle{ 2\pi a }[/math] is the circumference of a circumscribed concentric circle passing through the endpoints of the ellipse's major axis, and the lower bound [math]\displaystyle{ 4\sqrt{a^2+b^2} }[/math] is the perimeter of an inscribed rhombus with vertices at the endpoints of the major and minor axes.

The circumference of an ellipse can be expressed exactly in terms of the complete elliptic integral of the second kind.[7] More precisely, [math]\displaystyle{ C_{\rm{ellipse}} = 4a \int_0^{\pi/2} \sqrt{1 - e^2 \sin^2\theta}\ d\theta, }[/math] where [math]\displaystyle{ a }[/math] is the length of the semi-major axis and [math]\displaystyle{ e }[/math] is the eccentricity [math]\displaystyle{ \sqrt{1 - b^2/a^2}. }[/math]

See also

References

  1. San Diego State University (2004). "Perimeter, Area and Circumference". Addison-Wesley. http://www-rohan.sdsu.edu/~pwbrock/files/UNIT9.3.pdf. 
  2. Bennett, Jeffrey; Briggs, William (2005), Using and Understanding Mathematics / A Quantitative Reasoning Approach (3rd ed.), Addison-Wesley, p. 580, ISBN 978-0-321-22773-7 
  3. Jacobs, Harold R. (1974), Geometry, W. H. Freeman and Co., p. 565, ISBN 0-7167-0456-0 
  4. Sloane, N. J. A., ed. "Sequence A000796". OEIS Foundation. https://oeis.org/A000796. 
  5. Katz, Victor J. (1998), A History of Mathematics / An Introduction (2nd ed.), Addison-Wesley Longman, p. 109, ISBN 978-0-321-01618-8, https://archive.org/details/historyofmathema00katz/page/109 
  6. Jameson, G.J.O. (2014). "Inequalities for the perimeter of an ellipse". Mathematical Gazette 98 (499): 227–234. doi:10.2307/3621497. 
  7. Almkvist, Gert; Berndt, Bruce (1988), "Gauss, Landen, Ramanujan, the arithmetic-geometric mean, ellipses, π, and the Ladies Diary", American Mathematical Monthly 95 (7): 585–608, doi:10.2307/2323302 

External links