Circle Equation Calculator

Find the standard form, general form, area, arc length, chord and sector — instantly.

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A circle equation calculator that handles every common geometry task in one place: write the equation of a circle in standard form or general form, convert between the two, compute area and circumference, find arc length, chord length (plus the sagitta), and sector area — all from the radius and a central angle. A live SVG diagram updates as you type, and a Copy button lets you paste results directly into documents or spreadsheets. Everything runs client-side; no data leaves your browser.

How it works

A circle is the set of all points in a plane that are the same distance — the radius — from a fixed point called the centre. That single idea generates every formula below.

Standard form

(x - h)^2 + (y - k)^2 = r^2

Here (h, k) is the centre and r is the radius. The equation simply says “the distance from (x, y) to (h, k) equals r”, written via the Pythagorean theorem. This is the most readable form: you can read off the centre and radius by inspection.

General form

x^2 + y^2 + Dx + Ey + F = 0

Expanding the standard form and collecting terms gives the general form. The relationships are D = -2h, E = -2k and F = h^2 + k^2 - r^2, so:

  • Centre = (-D/2, -E/2)
  • r^2 = D^2/4 + E^2/4 - F

The calculator recovers both when you enter D, E and F.

Area and circumference

QuantityFormula
Areapi * r^2
Circumference2 * pi * r
Diameter2r

Arc length and sector area

For a central angle theta (in radians):

  • Arc length L = r * theta
  • Sector area A = (1/2) * r^2 * theta

The calculator accepts degrees and converts internally (theta_rad = theta_deg * pi / 180).

Chord length and sagitta

A chord connects two points on the circle. If the central angle subtended is theta:

  • Chord length = 2r sin(theta/2)
  • Sagitta h = r(1 - cos(theta/2))

The sagitta is the height of the circular segment — the bulge between the chord and the arc.

Worked example

A circle has centre (3, -2) and radius 5.

Standard form: (x - 3)^2 + (y + 2)^2 = 25

General form: expand and collect: x^2 - 6x + 9 + y^2 + 4y + 4 = 25, so x^2 + y^2 - 6x + 4y - 12 = 0 (D = -6, E = 4, F = -12)

Measurements:

  • Area = pi * 25 ≈ 78.54 square units
  • Circumference = 10*pi ≈ 31.42 units

A 60-degree arc on this circle:

  • theta_rad = pi/3 ≈ 1.0472
  • Arc length = 5 * pi/3 ≈ 5.236 units
  • Chord length = 2 * 5 * sin(30°) = 10 * 0.5 = 5 units exactly
  • Sagitta = 5(1 - cos(30°)) ≈ 5(1 - 0.866) ≈ 0.67 units
  • Sector area = (1/2) * 25 * pi/3 ≈ 13.09 square units

All of these numbers appear automatically when you enter r = 5 and angle = 60 in the relevant mode of the calculator.

Formula reference

QuantityFormula
Standard form(x-h)^2 + (y-k)^2 = r^2
General formx^2 + y^2 + Dx + Ey + F = 0
Centre from general(-D/2, -E/2)
Radius from generalsqrt(D^2/4 + E^2/4 - F)
Areapi*r^2
Circumference2pir
Arc lengthr * theta (theta in radians)
Chord length2r * sin(theta/2)
Sagittar*(1 - cos(theta/2))
Sector area(1/2)r^2theta

Units are consistent throughout: lengths and areas share whichever unit you use for the radius (metres, centimetres, inches, etc.). The calculator never sends data to any server.

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