Disk Calculator: Quick Tool for Area, Circumference & Volume
A Disk Calculator computes geometric properties of a circle (disk) from common inputs—radius, diameter, or area—and returns derived values quickly.
Features
- Inputs: radius, diameter, or area (accepts decimal or fraction).
- Outputs: area, circumference (perimeter), diameter, radius, and disk volume when treated as a solid cylinder with a user-provided thickness/height.
- Unit handling: supports consistent unit conversions (e.g., mm ↔ cm ↔ m ↔ in) when a unit is supplied.
- Precision options: choose decimal places or significant figures.
- Angle/sector support: compute sector area and arc length given a central angle.
- Batch mode: calculate multiple disks from a list of inputs.
Formulas (use π ≈ 3.141592653589793)
- Area: A = π r^2
- Circumference: C = 2 π r = π d
- Diameter: d = 2 r
- Radius: r = sqrt(A / π) or r = d / 2
- Cylinder (disk volume with thickness h): V = A × h = π r^2 h
- Sector area: A_sector = 0.5 r^2 θ (θ in radians)
- Arc length: s = r θ (θ in radians)
Example calculations
- Input: radius = 5 cm
- Area = 78.5398 cm²
- Circumference = 31.4159 cm
- Volume with h = 2 cm → V = 157.0796 cm³
- Input: area = 50 m²
- Radius = sqrt(50/π) = 3.9894 m
- Circumference = 25.058 m
Implementation notes
- Validate inputs (non-negative, consistent units).
- Convert central angles in degrees to radians: radians = degrees × π / 180.
- For high precision, use language-native math constants or libraries for π and sqrt.
Use cases
- Engineering quick-checks (parts, flanges)
- Classroom demonstrations and homework checks
- 3D printing / CNC where disk thickness gives volume/material estimate
- Simple unit converters for DIY projects
Limitations
- Assumes perfect geometric shapes (no irregularities).
- Volume assumes uniform thickness and solid material.
Leave a Reply