A slice of pizza, a windscreen wiper's sweep, a clock hand's path — all are pieces of a circle. Learn to measure a sector, an arc and a segment, then drag the angle and watch the area grow.
Play with it
Drag the angle θ. The shaded sector grows, and its area = (θ/360)·πr², the arc length = (θ/360)·2πr, and the segment (sector minus triangle) all update.
Learn
Two formulas you already know carry this whole chapter:
Everything else — sectors, arcs, segments — is just a fraction of these.
Use π = 22/7 when the radius is a multiple of 7 (the numbers come out clean), and π ≈ 3.14 otherwise. The question usually tells you which.
A sector is the "pizza slice" between two radii and the arc. Since a full circle is 360°, a sector of angle θ is the fraction θ/360 of the whole:
Find the area and arc length of a 90° sector of a circle of radius 7 cm (take π = 22/7).
A segment is the region between a chord and its arc. To find it, take the sector and cut away the triangle formed by the two radii and the chord:
The triangle's area (two radii r with angle θ between them) is ½ r² sin θ.
Find the area of the minor segment cut by a 90° sector of a circle of radius 10 cm (π ≈ 3.14).
Why this matters
Circles are everywhere round things move or get shared — and "how much area?" is a question that pays. Pizza, wipers, pie charts and sprinklers all live in this chapter.
A windscreen wiper of length r sweeping through an angle θ clears a sector of area (θ/360)·πr². Designers choose the blade length and sweep angle to clear the most glass. Lawn sprinklers and ceiling fans are sized the same way.
Sector areaEvery slice of a pie chart is a sector whose angle is that category's share of 360°. Splitting a pizza fairly, dividing land, or showing a budget breakdown all use the same θ/360 idea you just learned.
θ ∝ share of 360°A clock hand or speedometer needle sweeps a sector; its area and arc come straight from θ/360.
Curved running-track ends are semicircles; designers compute their arc lengths for fair lanes.
The area of a ring (annulus) is the big circle minus the small one — a direct πr² subtraction.
Clocks, running tracks, rings and more — each explained with a diagram. Free to unlock.
Create a free account to unlock →Check yourself
Modelled on CBSE's competency pattern — MCQ, assertion–reason and case-study items.
Interactive visualiser hand-built for trykarkedekho. Content from the rationalised NCERT Class 10 Maths syllabus (ncert.nic.in).
Buffyyour study buddyBuffy is an AI helper and can be wrong — always check your NCERT textbook.