Radians & degrees (video) | Radians | Khan Academy (2024)

Want to join the conversation?

Log in

  • Rishub Podar

    10 years agoPosted 10 years ago. Direct link to Rishub Podar's post “Can you possibly have neg...”

    Can you possibly have negative angles?

    (43 votes)

    • Stanley

      10 years agoPosted 10 years ago. Direct link to Stanley's post “Negative angles are clock...”

      Radians & degrees (video) | Radians | Khan Academy (4)

      Radians & degrees (video) | Radians | Khan Academy (5)

      Radians & degrees (video) | Radians | Khan Academy (6)

      Negative angles are clockwise angles. (Counterclockwise is positive)

      (89 votes)

  • G junior

    8 years agoPosted 8 years ago. Direct link to G junior's post “If pi continues forever, ...”

    If pi continues forever, how can we use it to define answers? That would mean every answer we get would continue on forever, but we shorten pi and thus makes none of the math we do with pi actually 100% true but rather an estimated amount. I don't even understand the concept of pi honestly. Can someone explain to me?

    (32 votes)

    • Super7SonicX

      7 years agoPosted 7 years ago. Direct link to Super7SonicX's post “Take a measurement of a l...”

      Radians & degrees (video) | Radians | Khan Academy (10)

      Radians & degrees (video) | Radians | Khan Academy (11)

      Radians & degrees (video) | Radians | Khan Academy (12)

      Take a measurement of a length of anything, we won't get an exact whole number. A pencil said to be 8 cm long may be 8.000034 cm for example. We are always estimating because the exact amount is almost never needed, and we take as accurate a measurement as required. So, every answer may continue on forever, but what we estimate, is what we need practically.

      Theoretically in math, since we always use rational numbers most of the time, an irrational number like pi is often confusing as it does not provide a definite rational answer. Instead we have to estimate to the accuracy required for the situation. If you want to find the circumference of a random cart wheel, you dont need accuracy. When you find the circumference of a rocket, you may need more accuracy.

      But of course, theoretically we can still get a definite answer if we just dont expand π and leave it as π. Circumference of a circle of diameter 3 is 3π. This gives you a perfect theortical answer. Otherwise it would be 3*3.14..... and as you said, it is not a perfect defined answer and is not theoretically accurate.

      Hope this helps!
      - Super7SonicX

      (73 votes)

  • kaidragonore210

    a year agoPosted a year ago. Direct link to kaidragonore210's post “I like how he said _radia...”

    I like how he said radiaseseseseseseses.

    (38 votes)

    • 1140858

      a year agoPosted a year ago. Direct link to 1140858's post “True”

      True

      (5 votes)

  • migalhas1998

    12 years agoPosted 12 years ago. Direct link to migalhas1998's post “Is there any kind of nota...”

    Is there any kind of notation for radians?

    (24 votes)

    • Parth Sastry

      11 years agoPosted 11 years ago. Direct link to Parth Sastry's post “Yes, there is, though it ...”

      Radians & degrees (video) | Radians | Khan Academy (19)

      Radians & degrees (video) | Radians | Khan Academy (20)

      Yes, there is, though it is rarely used.
      Usually, the no. of radians is written like 2rad
      You write degrees with a little circle at the top 1.2°
      Same way, an angle of 1.2 radians would be written either as "1.2 rad" or "1.2 with a "c" at the top.(I can't seem to get the 'c' using formatting here.)

      See-
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radian
      , second paragraph last line for the answer to your question.

      (32 votes)

  • abean077

    12 years agoPosted 12 years ago. Direct link to abean077's post “Are negative degrees actu...”

    Are negative degrees actual things, or are they hypothetical like negative numbers?

    (14 votes)

    • ym0671

      11 years agoPosted 11 years ago. Direct link to ym0671's post “they are actual things. F...”

      Radians & degrees (video) | Radians | Khan Academy (24)

      they are actual things. For example, if you rotate an object 90 degrees clockwise, it would be -90 degrees. Like the number line, negative and positive only show direction

      (24 votes)

  • marla_chaos

    3 years agoPosted 3 years ago. Direct link to marla_chaos's post “Is 1.5 pi the same as 270...”

    Is 1.5 pi the same as 270?

    (9 votes)

    • Andrzej Olsen

      3 years agoPosted 3 years ago. Direct link to Andrzej Olsen's post “Yep, 1.5π radians is exac...”

      Radians & degrees (video) | Radians | Khan Academy (28)

      Yep, 1.5π radians is exactly 270°.

      We usually use fractions for radians, so that would be 3π/2. What you said is completely correct, though!

      (18 votes)

  • J.A.R.V.I.S.

    6 years agoPosted 6 years ago. Direct link to J.A.R.V.I.S.'s post “Is there any other way to...”

    Is there any other way to measure the angle just like degrees, radians....?

    (8 votes)

    • Howard Bradley

      6 years agoPosted 6 years ago. Direct link to Howard Bradley's post “There was an attempt at a...”

      Radians & degrees (video) | Radians | Khan Academy (32)

      There was an attempt at a metric measure of angle where the right angle was divided into 100 parts (as opposed to the usual 90 degrees). The measure was called the gradian. There were 400 gradians in a complete revolution, and 1 gradian = 0.9 degrees.

      It hasn't really caught on, and the only place I've seen it is on calculators.

      Is that what you had in mind?
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gradian

      (17 votes)

  • sjosada

    a year agoPosted a year ago. Direct link to sjosada's post “isn't -90 degrees 270 deg...”

    isn't -90 degrees 270 degrees?

    (11 votes)

    • Venkata

      a year agoPosted a year ago. Direct link to Venkata's post “If the reference point is...”

      If the reference point is the positive x axis then yes, -90 degrees is 270 degrees.

      (7 votes)

  • Lilly Brown

    6 years agoPosted 6 years ago. Direct link to Lilly Brown's post “Why did humans invent rad...”

    Why did humans invent radians and degrees? Isn't one enough?

    (7 votes)

    • cossine

      6 years agoPosted 6 years ago. Direct link to cossine's post “Radians make calculation ...”

      Radians make calculation easier in dealimg with derivatives.

      https://qedinsight.wordpress.com/2011/03/14/why-radian-measure-makes-life-easier-in-mathematics-and-physics/

      For example, if you take the derivative of sin x that will be
      pi/180 cos x using degrees however by defining pi=180 the derivative will just be cos x which is simpler. You can get the result from the proof theorem on the derivative of sin x being cos x except instead of using radians as Sal does in his calculations use degrees. You will also notice that:

      lim_x->0 sin x/x doesn`t equal 1 but pi/180 from using degrees by following the steps he carries out.

      To understand the proof you should, however, have an understanding of limits/differentiation and circular geometry has in finding arc length and the area of a sector which you can learn about in some of Sal videos.

      (6 votes)

  • Anna Lesley

    5 years agoPosted 5 years ago. Direct link to Anna Lesley's post “When I have 5pi/9 and I a...”

    When I have 5pi/9 and I am converting it to degrees do I set them up in the proportion just as in the video? And just like the example with -pi/2 do I multiply the 5 by 180? My answer was 100 degrees. Would like to know if I did it right. thx!!

    (5 votes)

    • David Severin

      5 years agoPosted 5 years ago. Direct link to David Severin's post “You are correct, 5π/9 * 1...”

      You are correct, 5π/9 * 180/π = 100. Notice you could multiply 5 * 180 and divide by 9 or you could divide 180/9 to get 20 and then multiply by 5 to get 100.

      (7 votes)

Radians & degrees (video) | Radians | Khan Academy (2024)

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Dr. Pierre Goyette

Last Updated:

Views: 6681

Rating: 5 / 5 (70 voted)

Reviews: 85% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Dr. Pierre Goyette

Birthday: 1998-01-29

Address: Apt. 611 3357 Yong Plain, West Audra, IL 70053

Phone: +5819954278378

Job: Construction Director

Hobby: Embroidery, Creative writing, Shopping, Driving, Stand-up comedy, Coffee roasting, Scrapbooking

Introduction: My name is Dr. Pierre Goyette, I am a enchanting, powerful, jolly, rich, graceful, colorful, zany person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.