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Maths Problem

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sophie_1003 | 18:47 Fri 04th Nov 2011 | Jobs & Education
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Couldn't find a good place to put this but I thought it sounded like maths homework so here we go- I have a balloon that has (when blown up) a circumference of 37 inches; I want to cover it with lace doilies; how much area laid out flat will the doilies need to cover in order to fully cover the balloon? TIA
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435.8 square inches
Question Author
Ok; so if I lay out my doilies in a sort of square and measure two sides then times them together that will give me the area of doilies I've got (am trying to work out if I need more doilies!)
yes basically
Question Author
Ahh thank you! Am feeling mathematically challenged at the moment!
remember that balloons aren't flat so you're going to end up with some overlapping of doilies if you want to cover it completely; which means you may need mroe doilies than you think.
Having spent a while typing this out in Word I'm still going to post even though bibble's given you the answer. Good luck with it sophie. (that n is pi in Word !)

The formulae you need are surface area (SA) of a sphere and circumference(C) of a circle to find your radius which are
SA = 4πr² & C=2πr
You know 37 =2πr so radius is 37/2π, putting that in the SA formula gives you
SA= 4 x π x (37/2π²) which cancels out to give
SA = 37²/π which is roughly 436 square inches

Now it’s up to you because it depends on the size of the doileys (and also of course a balloon is not a perfect sphere)
Bibblebub's answer is correct- assuming the balloon is a perfect sphere. If it's a sausage shape the answer will be quite a bit different
i used:

c=π d => d = c/π

surface area = π d² = π (c/π)² = c²/π
Question Author
Thanks all; it's one of the punch ball balloons so is more of a sphere than most balloons; and had thought about overlap but just wanted a rough idea of how many more doilies I'd need!

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