Radian Measure and the Unit Circle

AI Thread Summary
Radian measure is defined as the angle subtended at the center of a unit circle, with a full circle measuring 2π radians or 360 degrees. A right angle corresponds to π/2 radians, while a straight angle measures π radians. To convert degrees to radians, multiply by 2π/360, and to convert radians to degrees, use the inverse fraction 360/(2π). Understanding these relationships helps clarify the connection between radians and degrees. This foundational knowledge is essential for mastering the unit circle and trigonometric calculations.
Sean Cook
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I need some guidance into understanding Radian Measure and the Unit Circle. This was the topic where I tanked and had to drop the course. I'm going to pick it up again next fall and want to start preparing now.

Any help is appreciated.

Sean
 
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What, exactly, do you want to know? "Radian Measure and the Unit Circle" is a wide topic!

Essentially the idea of radian measure is that it IS the circumference around a unit circle cut off by an angle at the center. In particular, since a circle of radius 1 has total circumference of 2\pi, radian measure in a circle goes from 0 to 2\pi. A right angle cuts off 1/4 of the circle and so its measure is 2\pi/4= \pi/2 radians. A "straight angle" cuts off 1/2 the circle and so its measure is 2\pi/2= \pi radians.
 
That makes a lot more sense to me than the way is was explained, but it leads to my next trouble spot. How is a radian measured in degrees? This was where I was told to think of it like a "Clock" and that confused me and was unable to perform the calculations.

Sean
 
A complete circle is 2\pi radians or 360 degrees. You can think of that as "2\pi radians per degree" or
\frac{2\pi \text{radians}}{360 \text{degrees}}[/itex] So to go from degrees to radians you multiply by 2\pi/360 degrees to &quot;cancel&quot; the degrees and get radians. That is 90 degrees is (2\pi/360)(90)= \pi/2 radians.<br /> <br /> Going the other way, you just invert the fraction:<br /> \frac{360}{2\pi}[/itex].&lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt; \pi/3 radians corresponds to 360/(2\pi)(\pi/3)= 360/6= 60 degrees.
 
Thank you for explaining it this way, with the examples as well. I think I actually have a better understanding now :-)
 
I tried to combine those 2 formulas but it didn't work. I tried using another case where there are 2 red balls and 2 blue balls only so when combining the formula I got ##\frac{(4-1)!}{2!2!}=\frac{3}{2}## which does not make sense. Is there any formula to calculate cyclic permutation of identical objects or I have to do it by listing all the possibilities? Thanks
Since ##px^9+q## is the factor, then ##x^9=\frac{-q}{p}## will be one of the roots. Let ##f(x)=27x^{18}+bx^9+70##, then: $$27\left(\frac{-q}{p}\right)^2+b\left(\frac{-q}{p}\right)+70=0$$ $$b=27 \frac{q}{p}+70 \frac{p}{q}$$ $$b=\frac{27q^2+70p^2}{pq}$$ From this expression, it looks like there is no greatest value of ##b## because increasing the value of ##p## and ##q## will also increase the value of ##b##. How to find the greatest value of ##b##? Thanks
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