How do I put a Zenith Angle in my calculator?

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To compute the expression (2360/5280) times cos(73 degrees, 17'30") on a calculator, first convert the zenith angle from degrees, minutes, and seconds to decimal degrees. This involves converting 17' to degrees by dividing by 60 and 30" by dividing by 3600. The final answer is given as 0.446, but the source of this value is questioned. Users suggest using specific buttons on Casio and Sharp calculators for DMS input, while noting differences in functionality between various calculator models. Understanding the complete context of the question may clarify the calculations involved.
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1.I am given a zenith angle of 73 (degrees) 17'30"



2. How do I compute (2360/5280)times cos(73 degrees, 17'30") with a ti 89 and a regular scientific calculator?



3. The solution is .446 degrees


Thank you sooo very much.
 
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have a look at this link:

http://id.mind.net/~zona/mmts/trigonometryRealms/degMinSec/degMinSec.htm

convert to degrees...

to convert minutes to degrees divide by 60...
so 17' = 17/60 degrees

to convert seconds to degrees divide by 3600...
30" = 30/3600 degrees

But I don't see where the 0.446 comes from...
 
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Are you taking astronomy? Is the question about insolation?

Can you give the complete question?
 
on most casio and sharp calculators (FX series and DAL series, is what most students use in my part of the world), there is a button that looks like . , ,,
if your angle measurement is set to degrees, you can input DMS measurements like this:
73 (. , ,,) 17 (. , ,,) 30 (. , ,,) and it will do the calculation in DMS. On the casio it returns the andswer in DMS and you must press this button again when it displays the answer to show you in decimal degrees. Hope that helps. I have used a TI89 myself but can't think how it differs. I only have a TI83 to hand and that is very different to a TI89 I think
 
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