Segment Area Calculator
Circular Segment Area
Calculate area of circular segment using radius, chord length, height, or central angle. Visual diagram and step-by-step solutions.
Segment Area Result
9.06 units²
Formula Used:
Step-by-Step Calculation:
Segment Parameters:
Segment Diagram:
Segment area = Sector area - Triangle area
What is a Circular Segment?
A circular segment is the region of a circle bounded by a chord and the arc subtended by that chord. It's essentially a "slice" of a circle cut off by a straight line. The segment is characterized by its radius (R), chord length (c), segment height (h - distance from chord to arc), and central angle (θ - angle at center subtended by the chord).
Segment Area Calculation Methods
Using Radius & Angle
θ in radians
Most common method
Using Radius & Height
For given sagitta
Architecture applications
Using Chord & Height
Direct measurement
Surveying applications
Segment Properties
c = 2R sin(θ/2)
Interconnected formulas
Segment Area Formulas
1. Using Radius (R) and Central Angle (θ) in Radians
Primary formula for segment area:
A = ½R²(θ - sinθ)
Where: θ must be in radians
To convert degrees to radians: θ(rad) = θ(deg) × π/180
Example: R=10, θ=60° → A=½×10²(π/3 - sin(π/3)) ≈ 9.06
2. Using Radius (R) and Segment Height (h)
Formula when height (sagitta) is known:
A = R²cos⁻¹((R-h)/R) - (R-h)√(2Rh - h²)
Where: 0 ≤ h ≤ R
h = R - R cos(θ/2)
Example: R=10, h=2 → A ≈ 33.65
3. Using Chord Length (c) and Height (h)
Direct formula from chord and height measurements:
A = (c²+4h²)/(8h) × cos⁻¹((c²-4h²)/(c²+4h²)) - c(c²-4h²)/(8h)
Simplified: A = R²cos⁻¹((R-h)/R) - (R-h)√(2Rh-h²)
Where: R = (c²+4h²)/(8h)
Segment Parameter Relationships
| Parameter | Symbol | Formula | Range | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Radius | R | Given | R > 0 | Distance from center to circle |
| Chord Length | c | c = 2R sin(θ/2) | 0 ≤ c ≤ 2R | Straight line connecting arc endpoints |
| Segment Height | h | h = R(1 - cos(θ/2)) | 0 ≤ h ≤ R | Maximum distance from chord to arc |
| Central Angle | θ | θ = 2cos⁻¹(1 - h/R) | 0° ≤ θ ≤ 360° | Angle subtended by chord at center |
| Arc Length | s | s = Rθ | 0 ≤ s ≤ 2πR | Length of circular arc |
| Segment Area | A | A = ½R²(θ - sinθ) | 0 ≤ A ≤ πR² | Area of segment region |
Real-World Applications
Architecture & Construction
- Arch design: Calculating material needed for arched windows, doors, and bridges
- Dome construction: Determining segment areas for spherical domes and vaults
- Tunnel engineering: Calculating cross-sectional areas of circular tunnels
- Pipe design: Determining flow areas in partially filled pipes
Manufacturing & Engineering
- Gear design: Calculating tooth profiles and clearances
- Tank volume: Determining liquid volumes in horizontal cylindrical tanks
- Material cutting: Calculating waste material from circular cuts
- Mold making: Designing circular segment molds for casting
Land Surveying & Agriculture
- Irrigation design: Calculating water coverage areas for circular irrigation
- Land area: Measuring circular plot segments for agriculture
- Pond design: Determining areas of circular pond segments
- Crop circles: Analyzing circular patterns in fields
Science & Research
- Optics: Calculating lens segments and apertures
- Astronomy: Determining areas of planetary segments and phases
- Biology: Analyzing circular growth patterns and cell divisions
- Chemistry: Calculating cross-sections in molecular models
Common Segment Examples
| Segment Type | Radius (R) | Angle (θ) | Height (h) | Area | Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Semicircle | 10 | 180° | 10 | 157.08 | Half-circle arch |
| Quarter Circle | 10 | 90° | 2.93 | 28.54 | Quarter-round molding |
| Small Segment | 10 | 60° | 1.34 | 9.06 | Minor circular cut |
| Major Segment | 10 | 300° | 19.32 | 285.88 | Large circular section |
| Very Small | 10 | 30° | 0.33 | 2.25 | Thin segment |
| Almost Full | 10 | 330° | 19.62 | 310.06 | Near-complete circle |
Step-by-Step Calculation Process
Example 1: Using Radius=10 and Angle=60°
- Given: Radius R = 10, Angle θ = 60°
- Convert angle to radians: θ(rad) = 60 × π/180 = π/3 ≈ 1.0472 rad
- Apply formula: A = ½R²(θ - sinθ)
- Calculate R²: 10² = 100
- Calculate sinθ: sin(π/3) = √3/2 ≈ 0.8660
- Calculate (θ - sinθ): 1.0472 - 0.8660 = 0.1812
- Calculate A: ½ × 100 × 0.1812 = 50 × 0.1812 = 9.06
- Result: Segment Area ≈ 9.06 square units
Example 2: Using Radius=10 and Height=2
- Given: Radius R = 10, Height h = 2
- Calculate central angle: θ = 2cos⁻¹(1 - h/R) = 2cos⁻¹(1 - 0.2) = 2cos⁻¹(0.8)
- cos⁻¹(0.8) ≈ 0.6435 rad, so θ ≈ 1.2870 rad (≈ 73.74°)
- Calculate segment area: A = ½R²(θ - sinθ)
- R² = 100, sinθ = sin(1.2870) ≈ 0.9580
- A = ½ × 100 × (1.2870 - 0.9580) = 50 × 0.3290 = 16.45
- Alternative formula: A = R²cos⁻¹((R-h)/R) - (R-h)√(2Rh-h²)
- Result: Segment Area ≈ 16.45 square units
Example 3: Derivation from Sector and Triangle
- Segment Area = Sector Area - Triangle Area
- Sector Area: A_sector = ½R²θ (θ in radians)
- Triangle Area: A_triangle = ½R²sinθ
- Subtract: A_segment = ½R²θ - ½R²sinθ = ½R²(θ - sinθ)
- For θ=60°: A_sector = ½×100×(π/3) ≈ 52.36
- A_triangle = ½×100×sin(60°) = 50×0.8660 ≈ 43.30
- A_segment = 52.36 - 43.30 = 9.06
- This confirms our calculation from Example 1
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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Q: What's the difference between a segment and a sector?
A: A sector includes the triangular area from the center to the chord, while a segment excludes this triangle. Segment area = Sector area - Triangle area. Visually, a sector looks like a pizza slice, while a segment looks like a rounded "cap" cut off by a chord.
Q: How do I calculate segment area when I only know chord length and height?
A: First calculate radius: R = (c² + 4h²)/(8h). Then calculate central angle: θ = 2cos⁻¹(1 - h/R). Finally, use A = ½R²(θ - sinθ). Our calculator does this automatically when you select the "Chord & Height" method.
Q: What is the maximum possible segment area?
A: The maximum segment area for a given radius R is the area of the full circle minus the area of the inscribed equilateral triangle, which occurs when the chord is very close to the diameter. The theoretical maximum approaches πR² as the chord approaches the diameter.
Q: How is segment height related to chord length?
A: For a given radius R and central angle θ: h = R(1 - cos(θ/2)) and c = 2R sin(θ/2). These are related by: h = R - √(R² - (c/2)²). The height is also called the "sagitta" in geometry.
Master segment calculations with Toolivaa's free Segment Area Calculator, and explore more geometry tools in our Math Calculators collection.