Angles and their Measure
10.1 Angles and their Measure
🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
Angles can be measured in degrees or radians, and radian measure naturally connects angles to real numbers through the unit circle, enabling applications in circular motion and beyond.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- Two measurement systems: Degrees (360° per revolution) and radians (2π per revolution) both quantify rotation between two rays sharing a common vertex.
- Radian measure advantage: On the unit circle, an angle's radian measure equals the arc length it subtends, directly identifying angles with real numbers.
- Oriented angles: Direction matters—positive angles rotate counter-clockwise, negative angles rotate clockwise, and coterminal angles differ by full revolutions (360° or 2π).
- Common confusion: Radian measure is dimensionless (a ratio of lengths), so "π/6 radians" is really just the number π/6; don't treat radians as physical units like degrees.
- Circular motion application: For constant angular velocity ω on a circle of radius r, linear velocity v = rω connects rotational speed to tangential speed.
📐 Basic angle concepts
📐 What is an angle
Ray: A half-line with one endpoint (the initial point) extending infinitely in one direction.
Angle: Formed when two rays share a common initial point (the vertex).
- An angle measures the amount of rotation separating its two rays.
- The same diagram can represent multiple angles depending on which rotation path you measure.
- Example: Two rays can form both a small angle and a large angle going "the other way around."
🏷️ Labeling and types
- Angles are labeled with Greek letters: α (alpha), β (beta), γ (gamma), θ (theta).
- Special cases:
- Straight angle: The two rays point in opposite directions (180°).
- Right angle: One-quarter revolution (90°), marked with a small square symbol.
- Acute angle: Strictly between 0° and 90°.
- Obtuse angle: Strictly between 90° and 180°.
🌐 Degree measure
🌐 How degrees work
Degree measure: One complete revolution equals 360°, and partial rotations are measured proportionally.
- One degree (1°) = 1/360 of a full revolution.
- Half revolution = 180°, quarter revolution = 90°.
- Any angle's measure can be determined by knowing what fraction of a full revolution it represents.
- Example: An angle representing 2/3 of a revolution measures (2/3)(360°) = 240°.
🔢 Subdividing degrees
Two systems exist for angles smaller than 1°:
| System | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Decimal degrees | Use decimals (e.g., 30.5°) | 30.5° is halfway between 30° and 31° |
| DMS (Degree-Minute-Second) | 1° = 60′, 1′ = 60″, so 1° = 3600″ | 42.125° = 42°7′30″ |
Converting decimal to DMS:
- Separate whole degrees from the decimal part.
- Multiply the decimal part by 60 to get minutes (separate whole and decimal again).
- Multiply remaining decimal by 60 to get seconds.
Converting DMS to decimal:
- Convert minutes to degrees by dividing by 60.
- Convert seconds to degrees by dividing by 3600.
- Add all parts together.
🔗 Angle relationships
Complementary angles: Two acute angles whose measures sum to 90°.
Supplementary angles: Two angles (either both right, or one acute and one obtuse) whose measures sum to 180°.
Don't confuse: These relationships depend on the sum, not the individual angle types.
↻ Oriented angles and standard position
↻ Direction matters
Oriented angle: An angle where rotation direction is specified—positive for counter-clockwise, negative for clockwise.
- Angles can represent more than one full revolution.
- Example: 450° = one full revolution (360°) plus an additional 90°.
- The distinction between "the angle" and "its measure" is often blurred in practice (e.g., "α = 42°").
📍 Standard position
Standard position: An angle whose vertex is at the origin and whose initial side lies on the positive x-axis.
Classification by terminal side location:
| Terminal side location | Name |
|---|---|
| In Quadrant I, II, III, or IV | "Quadrant [I/II/III/IV] angle" |
| On a coordinate axis | "Quadrantal angle" |
🔄 Coterminal angles
Coterminal angles: Angles in standard position that share the same terminal side.
- Coterminal angles differ by multiples of 360°.
- Formula: If α and β are coterminal, then β = α + 360°·k for some integer k.
- Example: 120° and −240° are coterminal because −240° = 120° − 360°.
- Every angle has infinitely many coterminal angles (one for each integer k).
🔵 Radian measure
🔵 Definition and motivation
π (pi): The ratio of any circle's circumference to its diameter; π = C/d.
- Since diameter = 2·radius, we have 2π = C/r (circumference-to-radius ratio is constant).
- For an arc of length s on a circle of radius r, the ratio s/r is also constant.
Radian measure: The measure of a central angle θ equals s/r, where s is the arc length the angle subtends and r is the circle's radius.
Intuitive meaning: An angle of 1 radian means the arc length equals the radius; 2 radians means arc length = 2r, etc.
🔵 Key radian values
- One full revolution: 2πr/r = 2π radians
- Half revolution: π radians
- Quarter revolution: π/2 radians
- Radians are dimensionless (length ÷ length), so they're "pure numbers"
🔵 Oriented radians
- Positive radian measure: counter-clockwise rotation
- Negative radian measure: clockwise rotation
- Coterminal angles in radians: β = α + 2πk for integer k
- Complementary angles: α + β = π/2
- Supplementary angles: α + β = π
🔄 Converting between degrees and radians
Conversion factors:
- Degrees to radians: multiply by (π radians)/(180°)
- Radians to degrees: multiply by (180°)/(π radians)
| Degrees | Radians | Calculation |
|---|---|---|
| 60° | π/3 | 60°·(π/180°) = π/3 |
| −150° | −5π/6 | (−5π/6)·(180°/π) = −150° |
| 1 radian | ≈57.3° | 180°/π ≈ 57.2958° |
Don't confuse: The negative sign carries through in both systems—it always indicates clockwise rotation.
🎯 The unit circle connection
🎯 Identifying angles with real numbers
On the unit circle (x² + y² = 1):
- For an angle θ in standard position, let s = arc length from (1,0) to the terminal point.
- Since radius = 1, the radian measure equals the arc length: θ = s/1 = s.
- This directly identifies each real number t with an angle of t radians.
Wrapping the number line:
- For t > 0: wrap the interval [0, t] counter-clockwise around the unit circle starting at (1, 0).
- For t < 0: wrap the interval [t, 0] clockwise around the unit circle.
- For t = 0: the point is (1, 0).
Example: The real number 3π/4 corresponds to an angle of 3π/4 radians, which is 3/8 of a revolution counter-clockwise from (1, 0).
🎯 Large and negative values
- For |t| > 2π, the arc wraps around the circle multiple times.
- Example: t = 117 ≈ 18.62 revolutions, so after 18 full loops, about 0.62 of a revolution remains.
- For negative t, count clockwise revolutions.
Don't confuse: The arc length and angle measure are the same number on the unit circle, but this only works because radius = 1.
🎡 Circular motion applications
🎡 Velocity concepts
Setup: An object moves on a circular path of radius r from point P to point Q in time t.
Displacement s: The arc length traveled (positive for counter-clockwise, negative for clockwise).
Average velocity v̄: The average rate of change of position = s/t (units: length/time).
- The formula θ = s/r still holds with signed values.
- Speed = |v̄| (the magnitude, ignoring direction).
🎡 Angular velocity
Average angular velocity ω̄: The average rate of change of angle = θ/t (units: radians/time).
Since s = rθ, we have: v̄ = s/t = rθ/t = r·(θ/t) = r·ω̄
When angular velocity is constant:
- Average velocities equal instantaneous velocities (v̄ = v, ω̄ = ω).
- v is called linear velocity (or just "velocity").
- ω is called angular velocity.
🎡 The fundamental formula
v = rω: For circular motion with constant angular velocity ω on a circle of radius r, the linear velocity is v = rω.
Unit reconciliation:
- Left side: length/time
- Right side: length · (radians/time) = (length · radians)/time
- Since radians are dimensionless, this reduces to length/time ✓
Physical interpretation: Points farther from the center (larger r) must travel faster (larger v) to maintain the same angular frequency ω, because they cover more distance per revolution.
🎡 Frequency and period
| Quantity | Symbol | Definition | Units |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ordinary frequency | f | Revolutions per unit time | 1/time |
| Angular frequency | ω | Radians per unit time; ω = 2πf | radians/time |
| Period | T | Time for one complete cycle; T = 1/f | time |
Example: Earth rotates once per 24 hours, so f = 1/(24 hours) and ω = 2π/(24 hours) = π/12 radians per hour. At latitude with radius 2960 miles, linear velocity v = 2960·(π/12) ≈ 775 miles/hour.
Don't confuse: Frequency measures "how often," period measures "how long for one cycle"—they're reciprocals.