Why is the Circle Measured in 360 Degrees?

In summary, the Babylonians were the first to invent writing and used a base-60 number system. They chose to divide a circle into 360 degrees because it was convenient for their calculations and also because an equilateral triangle with a base angle of 60 degrees was considered a "perfect" shape. This measurement system has continued to be used today, despite attempts to change it to a more metric-friendly 400 degrees. The use of 60 also allows for easy division into smaller units, making it a practical choice for navigation and other mathematical calculations. The number 12 would have been a better choice, but the fact that humans have 10
  • #1
crays
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Hi, I'm just wondering why is a circle 360 degree? Why not put it 400 for easy calculation?
 
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  • #2
crays said:
Hi, I'm just wondering why is a circle 360 degree? Why not put it 400 for easy calculation?

"In 1936, a tablet was excavated some 200 miles from Babylon. Here one
should make the interjection that the Sumerians were first to make one of
man's greatest inventions, namely, writing; through written communication,
knowledge could be passed from one person to others, and from one
generation to the next and future ones. They impressed their cuneiform
(wedge-shaped) script on soft clay tablets with a stylus, and the tablets
were then hardened in the sun. The mentioned tablet, whose translation
was partially published only in 1950, is devoted to various geometrical
figures, and states that the ratio of the perimeter of a regular hexagon
to the circumference of the circumscribed circle equals a number which in
modern notation is given by 57/60 + 36/(60^2) (the Babylonians used the
sexagesimal system, i.e., their base was 60 rather than 10).

The Babylonians knew, of course, that the perimeter of a hexagon is
exactly equal to six times the radius of the circumscribed circle, in fact
that was evidently the reason why they chose to divide the circle into 360
degrees (and we are still burdened with that figure to this day). The
tablet, therefore, gives ... Pi = 25/8 = 3.125."

Basically, If I understood that correctly, a hexagon (having 6 sides) is similar to a circle, and if you choose a hexagon with a radius of 1 unit then the perimeter is 6 units, but in their number system 1 unit is 60 of our units, so they chose the number of degrees in a circle to be the same as the perimeter of a "unit-hexagon", or 360.
 
  • #3
It's easy to divide by lots of other numbers, especially if you also use 12.
It's all the fault of those crazy Babylonians - the same reason we have 60 secons and 60 minutes

ps. You can divide a circle into 400, it's called 'gons' but apart from a few French surveyors nobody uses it - it just annoys software developers.
 
  • #4
This has to do with the cultures that developed the concept of "degrees." (Note it is a purely artificial measure.) The cultures (Babylonian, Sumerian, etc.) that developed angle measures many centuries ago used sexigesimal numeration (base-60) and were particularly fond of equilateral triangles. It appears that the base angle of such a triangle was ascribed a "perfect" measure of 1 unit, broken into 60 parts (or degrees). Since 6 such angles arranged around a point forms a full revolution, we get the 360 degrees familiar today.

Or ar least that is the current best thinking on the matter that I am aware of.

--Elucidus
 
  • #5
Thanks for the info. lol, i didn't know they existed XD. I mean the 'gons' thing. The babylonians count in base of 60, meant that they go from their 1 to 60 before going to our 10?
 
  • #6
crays said:
The babylonians count in base of 60, meant that they go from their 1 to 60 before going to our 10?
A bit of both, they had symbols for 1 and 10 (like the romans) but use them to count up to 60 then went to the next column ( 60 is handy for doing division because it divides by 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 12, 15, 20, and 30) so a hundred would be 1 '60' and 4 '10's

The gon is one of the french revolution attempts to make sensible metric measurements - but never really caught on. Like metric time (100 secs in a minute and 100 mins in an hour) it doesn't really have any advantages over splitting an angle into 90deg.
Another useful angle unit that never caught on outside the rather specialized business of dropping shells on people is the artillery mil. Divide a circle into 6400 (roughly 2pi*1000) and an angle of 1mil means 1m at 1000m (or 1ft at 1000ft).

Whats more remarkable is that using 60 survived unchanged from the first written culture to still annoying programmers today who have to deal with units of 123O 45' 67" in GPS
 
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  • #7
I heard that it was because a year was thought to have 360 days and the sun moved 1 degree per day along the ecliptic.
 
  • #8
Back in 1789 when the French promulgated the metric system, they did propose to divide the circle into 400 grads. Maybe your calculator even has that mode. But I have never had occasion to use it. It was about as successful as their 10-day-a-week, 3-week-a month calendar!
 
  • #9
And, of course, the really useful measure is "radians"- with [itex]2\pi[/itex] radians to a circle!
 
  • #10
crays said:
Hi, I'm just wondering why is a circle 360 degree? Why not put it 400 for easy calculation?
How would that result in easier calculation? 400 is not even divisible by 3.
 
  • #11
Preno said:
How would that result in easier calculation? 400 is not even divisible by 3.
It does in navigation, a 16 point compass rose (ENE etc) divide conveniently into 400 but not 360
 
  • #12
Preno said:
How would that result in easier calculation? 400 is not even divisible by 3.

There is an old anecdote about a math teacher with a smart kid in the class.

Teacher: Okay Johnny, how many of the numbers from one to ten are evenly divisible by 2?
Johnny: All of them.
Teacher: How would you divide 5 evenly by 2?
Johnny: 2 1/2 and 2 1/2.
 
  • #13
12 would have been a much better numbering system than 10.
10 is only divisible by 1, 2 and 5. You can't even divide it into quarters or thirds.

12 is divisible by 1,2,3,4 and 6.

You can see why the Sumerians chose 60; it is divisible by the first six numbers.
 
  • #14
the only hitch is that the damn monkeys from which we evolved got only 10 fingers ... so the ancients which were closer to monkeys than us and didn't have the (dis)advantage of MS Excell wouldn't know how to count till 12 with only 10 fingers ...

we still do not know but we can confuse ourself with more sophisticated things so we don't care.
 
  • #15
nirax said:
so the ancients which were closer to monkeys than us and didn't have the (dis)advantage of MS Excell wouldn't know how to count till 12 with only 10 fingers ...
It's easier to count to 12 on your fingers than 10 !
Moving your thumb over the tip and each joint on one hand is a lot quicker than folding fingers in (especially the ring finger) on both hands. And has the advantage that you can do it while holding a gate open or a shepherd's stick with the other hand.

There used to be a theory that people counted to 8 using the thumbs and finger tips - that's why the word for 9 is similar to 'new' in a lot of languages - it was a new number. But sheep counting rhymes that predate the celts seem to be base 5 and 10 so it's been disgarded.
 
  • #16
Preno said:
How would that result in easier calculation? 400 is not even divisible by 3.

Aha! Some obscure country STILL maintains that a yard subdivided into 36 inches is far superior to a meter subdivided into 100 centimeters...
 
  • #17
g_edgar said:
Aha! Some obscure country STILL maintains that a yard subdivided into 36 inches is far superior to a meter subdivided into 100 centimeters...
Who uses yards as a measurement of anything? :uhh:
 
  • #18
DaveC426913 said:
Who uses yards as a measurement of anything? :uhh:
American football for one.

A significant deterrent for the US to wholeheartedly adopt the metric system is property descriptions, all of which are measured in feet. If we in the US were to discard the English system, every piece of property would have to be resurveyed, or at least, would need its description converted to metric measurements.

Here is a portion of the description of some property I own (underlines added by me):

"The North 555.10 feet of the East half of the Northwest quarter of the Northeast quarter of Section 21, Township 30 N. Range 6 West, W.M., EXCEPT that portion of the above described property lying easterly of the following described "Line 1":
"Line 1"
Beginning at a point lying North 89°54'22" West, a distance of 109.20 feet from the Northeast quarter of said Section 21; thence South 1°45'18" West to a point lying 555.10 feet South, as measured at right angles from the North line of said Section 21 and the end of "Line 1". "

The description goes on with about a half-page of exceptions.

In addition to the obvious measurements in feet, descriptions also situate the property in a given section, which is a square mile or 640 acres.

It would be a daunting task to convert all of these property descriptions.
 
  • #19
Mark44 said:
It would be a daunting task to convert all of these property descriptions.
It would be a daunting task to fly a probe to Mars too. After a few crashes, I wonder of converting to the same system as the rest of the world might look more appealing.
 
  • #20
I've got to toss in in favor of the radian as well. It has the advantage that to figure out the arc-length of a circle subtended by an angle, one just multiplies the radius by the angle! It's even linear in the radius. Very nice. And all the formulas come out nicer as well. I honestly think in radians and have to think for a second when people throw degrees at me.
 
  • #21
Mark44 said:
American football for one.
But if you converted to metric American football could be exported.
The big advantage of yards is that it stops the french playing cricket.
 
  • #22
the french did use to play cricket at the turn of last century. but the britishers beat them so soundly that they lost their apetite. now yard is their excuse to avoid defeat :D
 
  • #23
DaveC426913 said:
It would be a daunting task to fly a probe to Mars too. After a few crashes, I wonder of converting to the same system as the rest of the world might look more appealing.
Sure it's a lot of effort to send a probe to Mars, but there is at least the advantage of advancing human knowledge. There is no such similar advantage in converting all the US property descriptions.
 
  • #24
Mark44 said:
Sure it's a lot of effort to send a probe to Mars, but there is at least the advantage of advancing human knowledge. There is no such similar advantage in converting all the US property descriptions.

The point here is that there is a very real cost - in money, time and resources - associated with doing nothing more than maintaining a measuring system that is incompatible with the rest of the world.
 

1. Why is a circle 360 degrees?

A circle is 360 degrees because it is based on the number system we use, which is based on the number 10. Specifically, it is based on the number of degrees in a right angle, which is 90 degrees. A circle has four right angles, so when you multiply 90 degrees by 4, you get 360 degrees.

2. Is there a mathematical reason for a circle being 360 degrees?

Yes, there is a mathematical reason for a circle being 360 degrees. The number 360 has many factors, making it a convenient number for calculations. For example, 360 can be divided evenly by 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 12, 15, 18, 20, 24, 30, 36, 40, 45, 60, 72, 90, 120, 180, and 360. This makes it easier to divide a circle into equal parts for measurements and calculations.

3. How did the number 360 become associated with a circle?

The number 360 became associated with a circle because of its divisibility and its practicality for calculations. It is also believed that ancient civilizations, such as the Babylonians and Egyptians, used a sexagesimal number system (based on the number 60) which influenced the use of 360 degrees in measuring circles.

4. Why isn't a circle divided into 100 degrees?

A circle is not divided into 100 degrees because it would not be practical or useful for calculations. As mentioned earlier, 360 has many more factors than 100, making it a more convenient number for calculations. Additionally, dividing a circle into 100 equal parts would result in smaller and less precise measurements compared to dividing it into 360 equal parts.

5. Are there cultures that use a different number of degrees for a circle?

Yes, there are some cultures that use a different number of degrees for a circle. For example, the ancient Greeks used a 360-day calendar, which may have influenced their use of 360 degrees in mathematics. Some cultures also use a 365-day calendar, which can result in a circle being divided into 365 degrees. However, the 360-degree system is the most widely used and accepted method for measuring angles in mathematics and science.

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