Sector Area Calculator
Compute the area of a circular sector (pizza-slice shape) from radius and central angle.
Degrees or radians, with multiple unit selections.
A sector is the slice of a circle between two radii — a pizza slice, a pie chart wedge, a fan blade outline. Two inputs define it: the radius r, and the central angle θ.
In degrees: A = (θ / 360) × π × r² In radians: A = ½ × r² × θ
Both formulas describe the same area. Pick whichever matches your angle measurement — most people work in degrees; engineers and physicists often work in radians.
Worked example — pizza slice: A 14-inch pizza cut into 8 equal slices. Each slice has a 45° central angle. Radius is 7 in. A = (45 / 360) × π × 49 = 0.125 × π × 49 ≈ 19.24 sq in per slice. The whole pizza is π × 49 ≈ 153.94 sq in, divided by 8 = 19.24. Math checks.
Where sectors show up in real measurements:
- Irrigation sprinkler coverage. A 90° sprinkler with a 25 ft throw covers (90/360) × π × 625 ≈ 491 sq ft. A full 360° head with the same throw covers about 1,964 sq ft — four times as much. That’s how you choose between corner heads (90°) and middle-yard heads (full or 180°).
- Garden flower beds. A quarter-circle bed against a fence corner with a 6 ft radius gives (90/360) × π × 36 ≈ 28.3 sq ft of planting area.
- Stadium seating sections. Auditoriums fan outward from a stage. Each seating section is roughly a sector with a known angle of view.
- Fabric or sail panels. Triangular spinnaker sails cut from a sector pattern lay flat after sewing.
Sector vs. segment — easy to mix up:
A sector is bounded by two radii and the arc between them — looks like a pizza slice. A segment is bounded by a single chord and the arc cut off by that chord — looks like a sliver crescent. If a pizza slice is the sector, the crust-end piece you’d cut off with one straight knife cut is the segment.
Sanity check at the extremes:
- θ = 360°: A = π × r², the full circle. ✓
- θ = 180°: A = ½ × π × r², half the circle. ✓
- θ = 0°: A = 0. ✓
If your sector spans more than 180°, you’re describing the “major sector” — still works, but you might want to subtract from 360 if you’re really after the small piece.