Polygon side equals sum of two radii
3.MD.D.83.G.A.1
Generated variants — 10
The figure on the right shows four circles of different sizes drawn so that they touch one another in a ring, with the centers of the circles joined to form quadrilateral ABCD. If the perimeter of quadrilateral ABCD is , what is the sum of the radii of the four circles, in centimeters?
Show solution
Understand
Four circles of different sizes touch one another in a ring. Joining their centers makes a quadrilateral ABCD. Each side connects two touching circles, so each side length equals the sum of those two circles' radii. The quadrilateral's perimeter is 36 cm, and I need the total of all four radii.
- Four circles touch (are tangent) in a ring; neighboring circles touch.
- Centers joined form quadrilateral ABCD.
- Each side equals the sum of the radii of the two circles meeting along it.
- Perimeter of ABCD is 36 cm.
- The sum of the radii of the four circles, in cm.
- When two circles touch on the outside, the distance between their centers equals the sum of their radii.
- Every radius is counted in exactly two sides (each circle touches two neighbors).
Plan
#9 Solve an Easier Related Problem · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
Write each side as a radius sum, then add all four sides. The sum reveals each radius appears exactly twice, turning the perimeter into double the radius total.
Execute
Review
The radius total (18 cm) is exactly half the 36-cm perimeter, which makes sense because the perimeter counts every radius twice. Units stay in centimeters.
Guess and check (tool 6): pick any four radii that sum to the answer; their four pairwise sides add to the given perimeter, confirming the rule.
Standards · min grade 3
3.G.A.1Understand that shapes in different categories share attributes — Recognizing each side of the center-quadrilateral as a sum of two touching circles' radii.3.OA.D.9Identify arithmetic patterns and explain using properties of operations — Seeing that each radius appears twice when all sides are added, so the perimeter is double the radius total.3.OA.A.2Interpret whole-number quotients of whole numbers — Dividing the perimeter by 2 to recover the sum of the radii.
The figure on the right shows four circles of different sizes drawn so that they touch one another in a ring, with the centers of the circles joined to form quadrilateral ABCD. If the perimeter of quadrilateral ABCD is , what is the sum of the radii of the four circles, in centimeters?
Show solution
Understand
Four circles of different sizes touch one another in a ring. Joining their centers makes a quadrilateral ABCD. Each side connects two touching circles, so each side length equals the sum of those two circles' radii. The quadrilateral's perimeter is 50 cm, and I need the total of all four radii.
- Four circles touch (are tangent) in a ring; neighboring circles touch.
- Centers joined form quadrilateral ABCD.
- Each side equals the sum of the radii of the two circles meeting along it.
- Perimeter of ABCD is 50 cm.
- The sum of the radii of the four circles, in cm.
- When two circles touch on the outside, the distance between their centers equals the sum of their radii.
- Every radius is counted in exactly two sides (each circle touches two neighbors).
Plan
#9 Solve an Easier Related Problem · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
Write each side as a radius sum, then add all four sides. The sum reveals each radius appears exactly twice, turning the perimeter into double the radius total.
Execute
Review
The radius total (25 cm) is exactly half the 50-cm perimeter, which makes sense because the perimeter counts every radius twice. Units stay in centimeters.
Guess and check (tool 6): pick any four radii that sum to the answer; their four pairwise sides add to the given perimeter, confirming the rule.
Standards · min grade 3
3.G.A.1Understand that shapes in different categories share attributes — Recognizing each side of the center-quadrilateral as a sum of two touching circles' radii.3.OA.D.9Identify arithmetic patterns and explain using properties of operations — Seeing that each radius appears twice when all sides are added, so the perimeter is double the radius total.3.OA.A.2Interpret whole-number quotients of whole numbers — Dividing the perimeter by 2 to recover the sum of the radii.
The figure on the right shows four circles of different sizes drawn so that they touch one another in a ring, with the centers of the circles joined to form quadrilateral ABCD. If the perimeter of quadrilateral ABCD is , what is the sum of the radii of the four circles, in centimeters?
Show solution
Understand
Four circles of different sizes touch one another in a ring. Joining their centers makes a quadrilateral ABCD. Each side connects two touching circles, so each side length equals the sum of those two circles' radii. The quadrilateral's perimeter is 80 cm, and I need the total of all four radii.
- Four circles touch (are tangent) in a ring; neighboring circles touch.
- Centers joined form quadrilateral ABCD.
- Each side equals the sum of the radii of the two circles meeting along it.
- Perimeter of ABCD is 80 cm.
- The sum of the radii of the four circles, in cm.
- When two circles touch on the outside, the distance between their centers equals the sum of their radii.
- Every radius is counted in exactly two sides (each circle touches two neighbors).
Plan
#9 Solve an Easier Related Problem · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
Write each side as a radius sum, then add all four sides. The sum reveals each radius appears exactly twice, turning the perimeter into double the radius total.
Execute
Review
The radius total (40 cm) is exactly half the 80-cm perimeter, which makes sense because the perimeter counts every radius twice. Units stay in centimeters.
Guess and check (tool 6): pick any four radii that sum to the answer; their four pairwise sides add to the given perimeter, confirming the rule.
Standards · min grade 3
3.G.A.1Understand that shapes in different categories share attributes — Recognizing each side of the center-quadrilateral as a sum of two touching circles' radii.3.OA.D.9Identify arithmetic patterns and explain using properties of operations — Seeing that each radius appears twice when all sides are added, so the perimeter is double the radius total.3.OA.A.2Interpret whole-number quotients of whole numbers — Dividing the perimeter by 2 to recover the sum of the radii.
The figure on the right shows four circles of different sizes drawn so that they touch one another in a ring, with the centers of the circles joined to form quadrilateral ABCD. If the perimeter of quadrilateral ABCD is , what is the sum of the radii of the four circles, in centimeters?
Show solution
Understand
Four circles of different sizes touch one another in a ring. Joining their centers makes a quadrilateral ABCD. Each side connects two touching circles, so each side length equals the sum of those two circles' radii. The quadrilateral's perimeter is 100 cm, and I need the total of all four radii.
- Four circles touch (are tangent) in a ring; neighboring circles touch.
- Centers joined form quadrilateral ABCD.
- Each side equals the sum of the radii of the two circles meeting along it.
- Perimeter of ABCD is 100 cm.
- The sum of the radii of the four circles, in cm.
- When two circles touch on the outside, the distance between their centers equals the sum of their radii.
- Every radius is counted in exactly two sides (each circle touches two neighbors).
Plan
#9 Solve an Easier Related Problem · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
Write each side as a radius sum, then add all four sides. The sum reveals each radius appears exactly twice, turning the perimeter into double the radius total.
Execute
Review
The radius total (50 cm) is exactly half the 100-cm perimeter, which makes sense because the perimeter counts every radius twice. Units stay in centimeters.
Guess and check (tool 6): pick any four radii that sum to the answer; their four pairwise sides add to the given perimeter, confirming the rule.
Standards · min grade 3
3.G.A.1Understand that shapes in different categories share attributes — Recognizing each side of the center-quadrilateral as a sum of two touching circles' radii.3.OA.D.9Identify arithmetic patterns and explain using properties of operations — Seeing that each radius appears twice when all sides are added, so the perimeter is double the radius total.3.OA.A.2Interpret whole-number quotients of whole numbers — Dividing the perimeter by 2 to recover the sum of the radii.
The figure on the right shows four circles of different sizes drawn so that they touch one another in a ring, with the centers of the circles joined to form quadrilateral ABCD. If the perimeter of quadrilateral ABCD is , what is the sum of the radii of the four circles, in centimeters?
Show solution
Understand
Four circles of different sizes touch one another in a ring. Joining their centers makes a quadrilateral ABCD. Each side connects two touching circles, so each side length equals the sum of those two circles' radii. The quadrilateral's perimeter is 60 cm, and I need the total of all four radii.
- Four circles touch (are tangent) in a ring; neighboring circles touch.
- Centers joined form quadrilateral ABCD.
- Each side equals the sum of the radii of the two circles meeting along it.
- Perimeter of ABCD is 60 cm.
- The sum of the radii of the four circles, in cm.
- When two circles touch on the outside, the distance between their centers equals the sum of their radii.
- Every radius is counted in exactly two sides (each circle touches two neighbors).
Plan
#9 Solve an Easier Related Problem · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
Write each side as a radius sum, then add all four sides. The sum reveals each radius appears exactly twice, turning the perimeter into double the radius total.
Execute
Review
The radius total (30 cm) is exactly half the 60-cm perimeter, which makes sense because the perimeter counts every radius twice. Units stay in centimeters.
Guess and check (tool 6): pick any four radii that sum to the answer; their four pairwise sides add to the given perimeter, confirming the rule.
Standards · min grade 3
3.G.A.1Understand that shapes in different categories share attributes — Recognizing each side of the center-quadrilateral as a sum of two touching circles' radii.3.OA.D.9Identify arithmetic patterns and explain using properties of operations — Seeing that each radius appears twice when all sides are added, so the perimeter is double the radius total.3.OA.A.2Interpret whole-number quotients of whole numbers — Dividing the perimeter by 2 to recover the sum of the radii.
The figure on the right shows four circles of different sizes drawn so that they touch one another in a ring, with the centers of the circles joined to form quadrilateral ABCD. If the perimeter of quadrilateral ABCD is , what is the sum of the radii of the four circles, in centimeters?
Show solution
Understand
Four circles of different sizes touch one another in a ring. Joining their centers makes a quadrilateral ABCD. Each side connects two touching circles, so each side length equals the sum of those two circles' radii. The quadrilateral's perimeter is 24 cm, and I need the total of all four radii.
- Four circles touch (are tangent) in a ring; neighboring circles touch.
- Centers joined form quadrilateral ABCD.
- Each side equals the sum of the radii of the two circles meeting along it.
- Perimeter of ABCD is 24 cm.
- The sum of the radii of the four circles, in cm.
- When two circles touch on the outside, the distance between their centers equals the sum of their radii.
- Every radius is counted in exactly two sides (each circle touches two neighbors).
Plan
#9 Solve an Easier Related Problem · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
Write each side as a radius sum, then add all four sides. The sum reveals each radius appears exactly twice, turning the perimeter into double the radius total.
Execute
Review
The radius total (12 cm) is exactly half the 24-cm perimeter, which makes sense because the perimeter counts every radius twice. Units stay in centimeters.
Guess and check (tool 6): pick any four radii that sum to the answer; their four pairwise sides add to the given perimeter, confirming the rule.
Standards · min grade 3
3.G.A.1Understand that shapes in different categories share attributes — Recognizing each side of the center-quadrilateral as a sum of two touching circles' radii.3.OA.D.9Identify arithmetic patterns and explain using properties of operations — Seeing that each radius appears twice when all sides are added, so the perimeter is double the radius total.3.OA.A.2Interpret whole-number quotients of whole numbers — Dividing the perimeter by 2 to recover the sum of the radii.
The figure on the right shows four circles of different sizes drawn so that they touch one another in a ring, with the centers of the circles joined to form quadrilateral ABCD. If the perimeter of quadrilateral ABCD is , what is the sum of the radii of the four circles, in centimeters?
Show solution
Understand
Four circles of different sizes touch one another in a ring. Joining their centers makes a quadrilateral ABCD. Each side connects two touching circles, so each side length equals the sum of those two circles' radii. The quadrilateral's perimeter is 40 cm, and I need the total of all four radii.
- Four circles touch (are tangent) in a ring; neighboring circles touch.
- Centers joined form quadrilateral ABCD.
- Each side equals the sum of the radii of the two circles meeting along it.
- Perimeter of ABCD is 40 cm.
- The sum of the radii of the four circles, in cm.
- When two circles touch on the outside, the distance between their centers equals the sum of their radii.
- Every radius is counted in exactly two sides (each circle touches two neighbors).
Plan
#9 Solve an Easier Related Problem · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
Write each side as a radius sum, then add all four sides. The sum reveals each radius appears exactly twice, turning the perimeter into double the radius total.
Execute
Review
The radius total (20 cm) is exactly half the 40-cm perimeter, which makes sense because the perimeter counts every radius twice. Units stay in centimeters.
Guess and check (tool 6): pick any four radii that sum to the answer; their four pairwise sides add to the given perimeter, confirming the rule.
Standards · min grade 3
3.G.A.1Understand that shapes in different categories share attributes — Recognizing each side of the center-quadrilateral as a sum of two touching circles' radii.3.OA.D.9Identify arithmetic patterns and explain using properties of operations — Seeing that each radius appears twice when all sides are added, so the perimeter is double the radius total.3.OA.A.2Interpret whole-number quotients of whole numbers — Dividing the perimeter by 2 to recover the sum of the radii.
The figure on the right shows four circles of different sizes drawn so that they touch one another in a ring, with the centers of the circles joined to form quadrilateral ABCD. If the perimeter of quadrilateral ABCD is , what is the sum of the radii of the four circles, in centimeters?
Show solution
Understand
Four circles of different sizes touch one another in a ring. Joining their centers makes a quadrilateral ABCD. Each side connects two touching circles, so each side length equals the sum of those two circles' radii. The quadrilateral's perimeter is 120 cm, and I need the total of all four radii.
- Four circles touch (are tangent) in a ring; neighboring circles touch.
- Centers joined form quadrilateral ABCD.
- Each side equals the sum of the radii of the two circles meeting along it.
- Perimeter of ABCD is 120 cm.
- The sum of the radii of the four circles, in cm.
- When two circles touch on the outside, the distance between their centers equals the sum of their radii.
- Every radius is counted in exactly two sides (each circle touches two neighbors).
Plan
#9 Solve an Easier Related Problem · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
Write each side as a radius sum, then add all four sides. The sum reveals each radius appears exactly twice, turning the perimeter into double the radius total.
Execute
Review
The radius total (60 cm) is exactly half the 120-cm perimeter, which makes sense because the perimeter counts every radius twice. Units stay in centimeters.
Guess and check (tool 6): pick any four radii that sum to the answer; their four pairwise sides add to the given perimeter, confirming the rule.
Standards · min grade 3
3.G.A.1Understand that shapes in different categories share attributes — Recognizing each side of the center-quadrilateral as a sum of two touching circles' radii.3.OA.D.9Identify arithmetic patterns and explain using properties of operations — Seeing that each radius appears twice when all sides are added, so the perimeter is double the radius total.3.OA.A.2Interpret whole-number quotients of whole numbers — Dividing the perimeter by 2 to recover the sum of the radii.
The figure on the right shows four circles of different sizes drawn so that they touch one another in a ring, with the centers of the circles joined to form quadrilateral ABCD. If the perimeter of quadrilateral ABCD is , what is the sum of the radii of the four circles, in centimeters?
Show solution
Understand
Four circles of different sizes touch one another in a ring. Joining their centers makes a quadrilateral ABCD. Each side connects two touching circles, so each side length equals the sum of those two circles' radii. The quadrilateral's perimeter is 16 cm, and I need the total of all four radii.
- Four circles touch (are tangent) in a ring; neighboring circles touch.
- Centers joined form quadrilateral ABCD.
- Each side equals the sum of the radii of the two circles meeting along it.
- Perimeter of ABCD is 16 cm.
- The sum of the radii of the four circles, in cm.
- When two circles touch on the outside, the distance between their centers equals the sum of their radii.
- Every radius is counted in exactly two sides (each circle touches two neighbors).
Plan
#9 Solve an Easier Related Problem · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
Write each side as a radius sum, then add all four sides. The sum reveals each radius appears exactly twice, turning the perimeter into double the radius total.
Execute
Review
The radius total (8 cm) is exactly half the 16-cm perimeter, which makes sense because the perimeter counts every radius twice. Units stay in centimeters.
Guess and check (tool 6): pick any four radii that sum to the answer; their four pairwise sides add to the given perimeter, confirming the rule.
Standards · min grade 3
3.G.A.1Understand that shapes in different categories share attributes — Recognizing each side of the center-quadrilateral as a sum of two touching circles' radii.3.OA.D.9Identify arithmetic patterns and explain using properties of operations — Seeing that each radius appears twice when all sides are added, so the perimeter is double the radius total.3.OA.A.2Interpret whole-number quotients of whole numbers — Dividing the perimeter by 2 to recover the sum of the radii.
The figure on the right shows four circles of different sizes drawn so that they touch one another in a ring, with the centers of the circles joined to form quadrilateral ABCD. If the perimeter of quadrilateral ABCD is , what is the sum of the radii of the four circles, in centimeters?
Show solution
Understand
Four circles of different sizes touch one another in a ring. Joining their centers makes a quadrilateral ABCD. Each side connects two touching circles, so each side length equals the sum of those two circles' radii. The quadrilateral's perimeter is 200 cm, and I need the total of all four radii.
- Four circles touch (are tangent) in a ring; neighboring circles touch.
- Centers joined form quadrilateral ABCD.
- Each side equals the sum of the radii of the two circles meeting along it.
- Perimeter of ABCD is 200 cm.
- The sum of the radii of the four circles, in cm.
- When two circles touch on the outside, the distance between their centers equals the sum of their radii.
- Every radius is counted in exactly two sides (each circle touches two neighbors).
Plan
#9 Solve an Easier Related Problem · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
Write each side as a radius sum, then add all four sides. The sum reveals each radius appears exactly twice, turning the perimeter into double the radius total.
Execute
Review
The radius total (100 cm) is exactly half the 200-cm perimeter, which makes sense because the perimeter counts every radius twice. Units stay in centimeters.
Guess and check (tool 6): pick any four radii that sum to the answer; their four pairwise sides add to the given perimeter, confirming the rule.
Standards · min grade 3
3.G.A.1Understand that shapes in different categories share attributes — Recognizing each side of the center-quadrilateral as a sum of two touching circles' radii.3.OA.D.9Identify arithmetic patterns and explain using properties of operations — Seeing that each radius appears twice when all sides are added, so the perimeter is double the radius total.3.OA.A.2Interpret whole-number quotients of whole numbers — Dividing the perimeter by 2 to recover the sum of the radii.