←Older revision | Revision as of 23:54, 30 October 2019 | ||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
Degrees and radians are two units for measuring angles.<ref>https://ift.tt/2JUVOyE> A circle contains 360 degrees, which is the equivalent of 2π radians, so 360° ''and'' 2π radians represent the numerical values for going "once around" a circle.<ref>https://ift.tt/2BW1FzU> Sound confusing? Don't worry, you can easily convert degrees to radians, or [[Convert Radians to Degrees|from radians to degrees]], in just a few easy steps.
|
Degrees and radians are two units for measuring angles.<ref>https://ift.tt/2JUVOyE> A circle contains 360 degrees, which is the equivalent of 2π radians, so 360° ''and'' 2π radians represent the numerical values for going "once around" a circle.<ref>https://ift.tt/2BW1FzU> Sound confusing? Don't worry, you can easily convert degrees to radians, or [[Convert Radians to Degrees|from radians to degrees]], in just a few easy steps.
|
||
[[Category:Trigonometry]]
|
[[Category:Trigonometry]]
|
||
+ | |||
+ |
== Practice Problems ==
|
||
+ |
[[Doc:Convert-Degrees-to-Radians-Practice-Problems,Convert-Degrees-to-Radians-Practice-Problems-ANSWER KEY]]
|
||
== Steps ==
|
== Steps ==
|
||
Line 23: | Line 26: | ||
#*'''Example 2''': 30° = 1/6π radians
|
#*'''Example 2''': 30° = 1/6π radians
|
||
#*'''Example 3''': 225° = 5/4π radians
|
#*'''Example 3''': 225° = 5/4π radians
|
||
− |
|
||
− |
|
||
− |
|
||
− |
|
||
== Video ==
|
== Video ==
|
from wikiHow - Recent Changes [en] https://ift.tt/2qZ1zpb
via IFTTT