Regular hexagon ABCDEF has a perimeter of 36. O is the center of the hexagon and of circle O. Circles A, B, C, D, E, and F have centers at A, B, C, D, E, and F, respectively. If each circle is tangent to the two circles adjacent to it and to circle O, what is the area of the shaded region (inside the hexagon but outside the circles)?
In the explanation is states: "To find the portion of circles A, B, C, D, E, and F that is inside the hexagon, we must consider the angles of the regular hexagon. A regular hexagon has external angles of 360/6 = 60°, so it has internal angles of 180 - 60 = 120°. This means that each circle has 120/360 or 1/3 of its area inside the hexagon."
Why can't I, in order to determine the area of the circle that is part of the hexagon, find the area of the circle (9pie) and divide it by 6, since 60degrees = 1/6 of the circle? And then add all the the circles portions within the hexagon (total of 6) together, so it would be 9pie again (in addition the the whole circle in the middle which is also 9pie)? Why does the angle double to 120degrees? I don't understand the terms the explanations uses and calculates such as "internal angles" and "external angles". Please let me know, thanks!