Expressing a decimal number in radians in terms of pi in a fraction

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around converting the decimal result of arctan(sin((3/4) * pi) * 2), which is approximately 0.955316618, into a fraction involving pi. Participants debate the necessity of expressing the answer in terms of pi, with some suggesting that it is a requirement for understanding concepts in exams. There is confusion regarding the functionality of scientific calculators in converting decimals to fractions, especially for this specific number. The original poster clarifies that the question is from a past paper and aims to express the angle in a standardized format. Ultimately, the conversation highlights the challenges of converting decimal angles to fractional forms of pi in mathematical contexts.
JFonseka
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Homework Statement



arctan(sin((3 / 4) * pi) * 2) = 0.955316618

I want to express that in terms of a fraction with reference to pi.



The Attempt at a Solution



I thought of first dividing that by pi itself, and then convert the resulting number into a fraction and tack pi on at the end, but the calculator won't convert the number.
 
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Get a calculator that works.
 
Yes, thank you for your valuable contribution. Go do something that's more constructive than wasting time irritating others with useless answers.
 
JFonseka said:
… the calculator won't convert the number.

the calculator won't convert what number to what? :confused:
 
On scientific calculators there is that fraction button that converts decimal numbers to fractions, however for this particular number it won't do it, either because it needs more decimal places to figure out a proper fraction or because it's not possible at all. It's part of a question from a past paper, so I'm assuming they want the answer in a fraction form of pi.
 
\frac{0.955316618}{\pi}= 0.30408672
0.30408672= \frac{30408672}{100000000}

so
0.955316618= \frac{3040867}{100000000}\pi

That fraction can be reduced of course.
 
JFonseka said:
On scientific calculators there is that fraction button that converts decimal numbers to fractions

i've never heard of that :redface:

so if you entered π (3.14159), and pressed the button, what should it give … 22/7 ? :confused:
… It's part of a question from a past paper, so I'm assuming they want the answer in a fraction form of pi.

why?? :confused:
 
tiny-tim said:
i've never heard of that :redface:

so if you entered π (3.14159), and pressed the button, what should it give … 22/7 ? :confused:


why?? :confused:

Probably to prove that OP understands the concept in an upcoming exam because giving a decimal answer is proof enough of using a prohibited calculator
 
tinytim thanks for your answer, though it's confusing I got that exact same fraction using an online calculator but that answer seems weird for an exam question.

And no, typing 3.14159 won't make it 22/7, because it's not exactly that.

Suppose there was some answer that came out to something like 0.210526315, and I pressed the fraction button, it would convert it to 4/19. I'm not too sure of the exact mechanics, it's just a button I've been familiar with for a while.

As for why they want it like that, it's just a standardized format. The full question was

Let a = 2e^(3*pi*i/4)

Plot a and the conjugate of a on the Argand diagram indicating the modulus and principal argument. I was working on getting the angle for the conjugate, which is that 0.955...number, but since the angles are usually expressed in some variation of a fractional pi, I was trying to convert that.

As for what SPYazdani said:

Probably to prove that OP understands the concept in an upcoming exam because giving a decimal answer is proof enough of using a prohibited calculator

I'm not too sure what you're trying to imply here. However it has nothing to do with prohibited calculators, it's an approved calculator and probably an outdated one at that. I'm working on a maths subject I completed nearly 4 years ago, and am revising it because I started university again and can't remember a thing, just to clear things up, and it has nothing to do with any upcoming exams.
 
  • #10
Hi JFonseka! :smile:
JFonseka said:
The full question was

Let a = 2e^(3*pi*i/4)

Plot a and the conjugate of a on the Argand diagram indicating the modulus and principal argument. I was working on getting the angle for the conjugate, which is that 0.955...number, but since the angles are usually expressed in some variation of a fractional pi, I was trying to convert that.

stop making things difficult for yourself!

if the answer is (say) 0.8 radians, why convert that to (0.8/π) times π radians?

"indicating the … principal argument" is asking for an angle, nothing more …

you can give it in units of radian or degree

even if the question specified radians, the unit is still 1 radian, not π radians :wink:

(and only convenient angles, such as 45° or 30°, are usually expressed as a multiple of π)
 
  • #11
Hey tiny-tim,

Thanks a lot for your time and help with my problem =)

Cheers
 

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