2005 AMC 8 Problems/Problem 25

Problem

A square with side length 2 and a circle share the same center. The total area of the regions that are inside the circle and outside the square is equal to the total area of the regions that are outside the circle and inside the square. What is the radius of the circle?

[asy]pair a=(4,4), b=(0,0), c=(0,4), d=(4,0), o=(2,2); draw(a--d--b--c--cycle); draw(circle(o, 2.5));[/asy] $\textbf{(A)}\ \frac{2}{\sqrt{\pi}} \qquad \textbf{(B)}\ \frac{1\plus{}\sqrt{2}}{2} \qquad \textbf{(C)}\ \frac{3}{2} \qquad \textbf{(D)}\ \sqrt{3} \qquad \textbf{(E)}\ \sqrt{\pi}$ (Error compiling LaTeX. Unknown error_msg)

Solution

Let that the region outside the circle, but inside the square is $a$ , and the area outside the square, but inside the circle, is $a$ as well. Let $r$ be the radius. We know that the area of the circle minus $a$ is equal to the area of the square, minus $a$ . We get:

$\pi r^2 -a=4-a$

$r^2=\frac{4}{\pi}$

$r=\frac{2}{\sqrt{\pi}}$

So the answer is $\boxed{\textbf{(A)}\ \frac{2}{\sqrt{\pi}}}$.

See Also

2005 AMC 8 (ProblemsAnswer KeyResources)
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Problem 24
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