Sensim Math · Depth 한국어

3-2 · Circles

Find each radius and diameter from segments

3.OA.C.73.G.A.1 · adapt · grade 3

Archetype: Radius and Diameter Relationships · step in a 11-type progression

▶ Practice — 12 problems

Three children each drew a circle and then described the circle they drew. Which child drew the smallest circle?

Show solution

Understand

Three children each drew a circle and described it differently. Liam's longest segment inside his circle is 12 in. Mia set her compass so the point and pencil were 7 in apart. Noah's segment that splits his circle into two equal halves is 10 in. We must decide whose circle is smallest.

Givens
  • Liam: the longest segment that fits inside a circle is 12 in.
  • Mia: the compass opening (point to pencil) is 7 in.
  • Noah: the segment that splits the circle into two equal halves is 10 in.
Unknowns
  • Which child drew the smallest circle.
Constraints
  • The longest segment inside a circle is its diameter.
  • The compass opening is the radius.
  • A segment splitting a circle into two equal halves passes through the center, so it is the diameter.

Plan

#15 Organize Information in More Ways · also uses: #3 Eliminate Possibilities

Each clue describes either a radius or a diameter. Convert all three to the same measure (diameter), then compare to find the smallest, ruling out the larger circles.

Execute

#15 Organize Information in More Ways 3.G.A.1
The longest segment that fits inside a circle goes through the center, so it is the diameter. Liam's diameter is 12 in.
dLiam=12d_{\text{Liam}} = 12
The widest line across a circle is the diameter.
#15 Organize Information in More Ways 3.OA.C.7
The compass opening from point to pencil is the radius (center to edge). Double it to get the diameter.
dMia=7×2=14d_{\text{Mia}} = 7 \times 2 = 14
Diameter is twice the radius, so double the 7 in compass opening.
#15 Organize Information in More Ways 3.G.A.1
A segment that splits a circle into two equal halves passes through the center, so it is the diameter. Noah's diameter is 10 in.
dNoah=10d_{\text{Noah}} = 10
Only a line through the center divides a circle into two equal halves; that line is the diameter.
#3 Eliminate Possibilities 3.OA.A.3
Now all three are diameters: Liam 12 in, Mia 14 in, Noah 10 in. The smallest diameter belongs to the smallest circle.
10<12<1410 < 12 < 14
With the same measure for all three, the smallest number is the smallest circle.
Answer: Noah

Review

After making every clue a diameter, the values 10, 12, 14 in are easy to compare; 10 in is the smallest, so Noah's circle is smallest. The trap was Mia's 7, which is only a radius (14 in across), not the smallest.

Convert everything to radius instead: Liam 6 in, Mia 7 in, Noah 5 in; the smallest radius (5 in, Noah) again gives the smallest circle (Tool 8, Analyze the Units).

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.G.A.1 Understand that shapes in different categories share attributes — Identifying the longest inside segment and the halving segment as diameters.
  • 3.OA.C.7 Fluently multiply and divide within 100 — Doubling Mia's 7 in radius to a 14 in diameter.
  • 3.OA.A.3 Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Comparing the three diameters to choose the smallest circle.
💡 Turn every clue into a diameter first -- once they match, the smallest number wins, just Grade 3 comparing!