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| Question 135729:  A circular pond 26 yd in diameter is surrounded by a gravel path 2 yd wide. The path is to be replaced by a brick walk costing $50 per square yard. How much will the walk cost?
 Answer by AlexxsDad(4)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! The gist of this problem is realizing that, in order to get the area of the walkway, we subtract the area of a smaller circle from that of a larger one.  The larger circle has a diameter of 28 yd (2 yd larger than the 26 yd circle), minus the 26 yd circle. So a 28 yd circle has a radius of 14 yd, and an area of 2 * pi * 14^2
 The area of the 26 yd circle is 2* pi * 13^2.
 (Radius is half of diameter).
 So, the area of the large circle is 2 * pi * 196 = 1231 sq yd (approx)
 and the area of the smaller is 2 * pi * 169 = 1062 sq yd (approx)
 (Always thought there was a beauty to these two adjacent squares  169 and 196!)
 So the area of the walk would be 1231 sqyd - 1062 sqyd = 169 sqyd
 This has to be multiplied by $50/sqyd to find the cost:
 169 sqyd * $50/sqyd = $8450
 (For your future study of "dimensional analysis," can you see how even the "sqyd" cancels out?)
 
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