We're always kind. Why would we be anything else? Thank you.
If you had a semi-circular trough and the water level was constantly changing. You know the depth from the bottom of the trough after the change. How would calculate the chord length in order to find the area? With this I can figure out the volume.
Does that make any sense?
Ken
You do not need to know any angles.If the radius = 2’, isn’t the radius and center angle the same in a 180 drgee semicircle?
Ref: http://mathworld.wolfram.com/CircularSegment.html
You do not need to know any angles.
From formula #9, the cord length is \(\displaystyle 2\sqrt{4d-d^2}\).
At that website \(\displaystyle R=2~\&~h=d\) in your diagram,
I have no idea what you mean by "tried to search for formula #9"Once again thank you. I am not a young man and that old saying "If you don't use it you lose it" is so true. I tried to search for formula #9 just to see what else may be there, the search was in vain. I am a hobbyist and want to incorporate this formula into some code on an MCU, it' a type of microprocessor. If I follow you all I need is the formula from #9 and this is all I need to calculate the area of liquid?
