Lesson 64: Arc Length and Sector Area

The Power of Radians

When you measure angles in radians (\(\theta\)), the formulas for parts of a circle become incredibly simple.

Note: \(\theta\) MUST be in radians for these to work!

Worked Examples

Example 1: Measuring an Arc

A circle has a radius of 10. How long is the arc formed by an angle of \(\pi/2\) (90°)?

Example 2: Area of a "Slice"

Find the area of a sector with radius 4 and angle \(2\pi/3\).

The Bridge to Quantum Mechanics

This is the foundation for Angular Momentum (Chapter 13). When an electron orbits a nucleus, its "path" is an arc. The speed of the particle is related to how fast the arc length is changing: \(v = r \cdot \omega\) (where \(\omega\) is the angular speed). In 3D quantum mechanics, we calculate the probability of a particle being within a certain "solid angle." This is effectively calculating the Sector Area on the surface of a sphere. This geometry is how we determine the shape of electron orbitals (the s, p, d, and f shells).