IB Maths AI HLGeometry ToolkitPaper 1 & 2l = rθ, A = ½r²θ~7 min read
Arcs & Sectors Using Radians
When the central angle is in radians, the formulas become beautifully simple: arc length is just l = rθ, and sector area is A = ½r2θ. No fractions of 360, no 2π floating around — this is the main payoff of switching from degrees to radians.
📘 What you need to know
Arc length (radians): l = rθ — just radius times angle.
Sector area (radians): A = ½r2θ — half of radius-squared times angle.
θ must be in radians for both formulas. If you’re given degrees, convert first using θrad = θdeg × (π/180).
Both formulas in the formula booklet — you don’t have to memorise them, but you must recognise when to use each.
Perimeter of a sector: P = l + 2r = rθ + 2r = r(θ + 2).
Major sector: replace θ with 2π − θ — or work out the minor sector and subtract from the whole disc.
Why the radian formulas are simpler
In degrees, you have to multiply by the fraction θ/360, which buries the geometry inside arithmetic. In radians, θ already is the fraction of a full turn — just with a different scale (2π instead of 360). On a unit circle (r = 1), the arc length equals the angle in radians by definition. Scaling the circle by r scales the arc by r as well, giving l = rθ. For the sector area, the full disc has area πr2, and the sector takes the fraction θ/(2π) of it, giving (θ/(2π)) × πr2 = ½r2θ. Same idea as the degree version, just cleaner constants.
A sector with central angle θ (in radians) and radius r. The bold teal arc is the boundary furthest from O; the shaded region is the sector itself.
Radian formulas
arc length: l = rθ · sector area: A = 12r2θperimeter of sector: P = rθ + 2r = r(θ + 2)
Forward and reverse problems
The forward problem is direct substitution: given r and θ, compute l or A. The reverse problem rearranges one of the formulas: given l and θ, find r = l/θ; given A and r, find θ = 2A/r2. If you’re ever given an angle in degrees in a “radian formulas” question, convert it to radians first — the formulas l = rθ and A = ½r2θ require θ in radians, otherwise the answer will be off by a factor of about 57 (the ratio 180/π).
Sanity check: if your sector spans a small fraction of the disc (say, π/6 rad = 1/12 of a full turn), then its arc length should be about 1/12 of the circumference, and its area about 1/12 of the disc area. Quick estimates like this catch unit errors fast.
🧭 Recipe — arcs & sectors (radians)
Check units: the angle must be in radians. Convert if necessary.
Pick the formula: l = rθ for arc, A = ½r2θ for area.
Substitute and simplify — many answers end up clean with π factors.
For perimeter, add the two radii: P = rθ + 2r.
For reverse problems, rearrange the formula for the unknown.
Worked examples
WE 1
Basic arc length (radians)
A sector has radius r = 10 cm and central angle θ = 3π5 rad. Find the arc length in exact form and to 3 s.f.
apply l = rθl = 10 × (3π/5) = 30π/5l = 6π cm (exact)decimal6π ≈ 18.85l ≈ 18.8 cm (3 s.f.)
WE 2
Basic sector area (radians)
A sector has radius r = 4 cm and central angle θ = 5π6 rad. Find the area in exact form and to 3 s.f.
A sector has central angle θ = 2π9 rad and arc length 6 cm. Find the radius to 3 s.f.
rearrange l = rθr = l/θ = 6 / (2π/9)flip the fractionr = 6 × 9/(2π) = 54/(2π) = 27/πr = 27/π ≈ 8.59 cm (3 s.f.)
WE 4
Reverse: find the angle
A sector has radius 5 cm and area 12 cm2. Find the central angle in radians.
rearrange A = ½r²θθ = 2A/r² = 2(12)/5²= 24/25θ = 0.96 radclean exact answer — no π involved.
WE 5
Applied: windscreen wiper
A windscreen wiper of length 50 cm sweeps through an angle of 2π3 rad. Find: (a) the arc length swept by the wiper’s tip; (b) the area cleaned; (c) the perimeter of the swept region. Give answers to 3 s.f.
A circular plaza of radius 20 m is divided by a path into two sectors. The smaller (seating) sector has central angle 3π4 rad. For the larger (walking) sector, find: (a) the central angle; (b) the area; (c) the perimeter. Give answers in exact form, then to 3 s.f. where appropriate.
Always check units first: the radian formulas need radians. If degrees are given, multiply by π/180 before substituting.
Keep π symbolic wherever possible — you’ll usually get the cleanest exact-form answer that way.
Factor when finding perimeter: P = r(θ + 2) is often quicker than computing arc + 2r separately.
Major sector trick: use 2π − θ in place of θ, or just subtract the minor sector’s value from the whole disc.
Pythagorean and “nice radian” recognition: when you see common angles π/6, π/4, π/3, π/2, π, expect clean simplifications.
⚠ Common mistakes
Plugging degrees into l = rθ — this gives an answer about 57 times too large; always convert first.
Confusing the two formulas — l = rθ for arc, A = ½r2θ for area. The square is on the area side.
Forgetting the ½ in the area formula — doubles your answer.
Calculator in degree mode when computing things like sin(π/6) inside a problem — check the mode setting.
Missing the two radii in the perimeter — sectors are bounded by an arc AND two radii.
Chapter complete — you now have all five Geometry Toolkit sub-topics: Coordinate Geometry, Perpendicular Bisectors, Arcs & Sectors (Degrees), Radian Measure, and Arcs & Sectors (Radians). Together they cover the foundational geometry you’ll lean on throughout AI HL.
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