october 13, 2011 at the end of today, you will be able to: describe angles and use radian and degree...
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Common Angles 90° 180° 270° 360°TRANSCRIPT
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October 13, 2011At the end of today, you will be able to:Describe angles and use radian and degree measures.
Warm-up: With a partner brainstorm what you remember about the following:
1. Sketch a positive and a negative angle on two separate graphs.
2. What are complementary and supplementary angles? Give some examples.
3. In which quadrant is the terminal side of a 225° angle?
4. What is 1 radian? Be prepared to teach the class what you remember!
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Angles in the coordinate plane• Most of our angles will be in “standard
position” – starting on the positive x-axis.
The initial side of the angle
The terminal side of the angle
The angle measure
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Common Angles90° 180°
270° 360°
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Positive angles (counterclockwise)Negative angles (clockwise)
The initial side always stays on the x-axis.
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Negative Angles
-90°-180°
-270°
-360°
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Make a sketch of the following angles:
1. 30° 2. 120° 3. 325°
4. -45° 5. -225° 6. -135°
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Coterminal Angles: α + 360k Angles that have the same initial and
terminal sides, but not the same angles.
Example 1: Coterminal angles for 210° α + 360k, k is the number of rotations
When α = 210, 210 + 360(1) =
210 + 360(-1) = Name 2 coterminal angles for 0°.
You try: Determine two coterminal angles (one positive and one negative) for 45° and -36°.
570°-150°
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So long, Degrees! Hello, Radians!What is a Radian?
r = the radius of the circle
r
r s = r
θ
One radian is the measure of the angle, θ, when the radius, r, is equal to the length of the arc, s.
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Understanding Radians
The unit circle is a circle with a radius of 1.
Two things to recall:It is 360° to go around the
entire circle.Circumference = 2πrSo… 360° = 2π(1) 360° = 2π radians
r = 1
360° = 2π
90° = 2
180° = π
270° = 23
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Common Angles
2
90°= 180° = π
270° = 360° = 2π23
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Degrees to Radians
180
180
180
When converting from degrees to radians, multiply
Example: Convert 125° to radians.
125 Reduce and leave as a fraction.
3625
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Go back to this slide, and rewrite the angles in radians. 1. 30° 2. 120° 3. 325°
4. -45° 5. -225° 6. -135°
6
3665
32
4
45
43
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Now let’s go the other way around…Radians to Degrees
180
54
54
Example: Convert to degrees.
180
Multiply
18036
= 144°
Your Turn!!! Convert 34
There’s a shorter way! Ask me.
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ClassworkPg. 290 #4, 13, 17, 31, 47, 52
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Common Angles in Radians