
To calculate:Area of the shaded part of the target.

Answer to Problem 65PFA
C.
Explanation of Solution
Given information:Radius of smallest
Formula used:Area of Circle is
Radius of smallest circle = 2inches.
Then, area of smallest circle =
Radius of medium circle = (2+6) inches =8 inches.
Then, area of medium circle =
Then, area of the shaded region= area of medium circle − area of smallest circle
Thus the correct equation is C.
Chapter 1 Solutions
Glencoe Algebra 1, Student Edition, 9780079039897, 0079039898, 2018
Additional Math Textbook Solutions
A First Course in Probability (10th Edition)
A Problem Solving Approach To Mathematics For Elementary School Teachers (13th Edition)
Basic Business Statistics, Student Value Edition
Elementary Statistics: Picturing the World (7th Edition)
Elementary Statistics (13th Edition)
Calculus for Business, Economics, Life Sciences, and Social Sciences (14th Edition)
- A research study in the year 2009 found that there were 2760 coyotes in a given region. The coyote population declined at a rate of 5.8% each year. How many fewer coyotes were there in 2024 than in 2015? Explain in at least one sentence how you solved the problem. Show your work. Round your answer to the nearest whole number.arrow_forwardAnswer the following questions related to the following matrix A = 3 ³).arrow_forwardExplain the following termsarrow_forward
- Solve questions by Course Name (Ordinary Differential Equations II 2)arrow_forwardplease Solve questions by Course Name( Ordinary Differential Equations II 2)arrow_forwardInThe Northern Lights are bright flashes of colored light between 50 and 200 miles above Earth. Suppose a flash occurs 150 miles above Earth. What is the measure of arc BD, the portion of Earth from which the flash is visible? (Earth’s radius is approximately 4000 miles.)arrow_forward
- e). n! (n - 1)!arrow_forwardSuppose you flip a fair two-sided coin four times and record the result. a). List the sample space of this experiment. That is, list all possible outcomes that could occur when flipping a fair two-sided coin four total times. Assume the two sides of the coin are Heads (H) and Tails (T).arrow_forwarde). n! (n - 1)!arrow_forward
- Algebra and Trigonometry (6th Edition)AlgebraISBN:9780134463216Author:Robert F. BlitzerPublisher:PEARSONContemporary Abstract AlgebraAlgebraISBN:9781305657960Author:Joseph GallianPublisher:Cengage LearningLinear Algebra: A Modern IntroductionAlgebraISBN:9781285463247Author:David PoolePublisher:Cengage Learning
- Algebra And Trigonometry (11th Edition)AlgebraISBN:9780135163078Author:Michael SullivanPublisher:PEARSONIntroduction to Linear Algebra, Fifth EditionAlgebraISBN:9780980232776Author:Gilbert StrangPublisher:Wellesley-Cambridge PressCollege Algebra (Collegiate Math)AlgebraISBN:9780077836344Author:Julie Miller, Donna GerkenPublisher:McGraw-Hill Education





