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Originally posted by DesertDug View PostA full circle is 2 pi.
When the angle is greater than 2 pi,
you subtract 2 pi and the remainder gives you the location of the terminal ray.
Since you have a fraction, I'll use 4/2 pi
13/2 - 4/2 = 9/2 - 4/2 = 5/2 - 4/2 = 1/2 pi
Check: 4/2 + 4/2 + 4/2 + 1/2 = 13/2 pi
That is 3 complete circles, then 1/2 pi.
The terminal ray is on the positive y-axis.
This is the answer per my documentation on Google.
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Originally posted by DesertDug View PostA full circle is 2 pi.
When the angle is greater than 2 pi,
you subtract 2 pi and the remainder gives you the location of the terminal ray.
Since you have a fraction, I'll use 4/2 pi
13/2 - 4/2 = 9/2 - 4/2 = 5/2 - 4/2 = 1/2 pi
Check: 4/2 + 4/2 + 4/2 + 1/2 = 13/2 pi
That is 3 complete circles, then 1/2 pi.
The terminal ray is on the positive y-axis.
Comment
-
Originally posted by DesertDug View PostA full circle is 2 pi.
When the angle is greater than 2 pi,
you subtract 2 pi and the remainder gives you the location of the terminal ray.
Since you have a fraction, I'll use 4/2 pi
13/2 - 4/2 = 9/2 - 4/2 = 5/2 - 4/2 = 1/2 pi
Check: 4/2 + 4/2 + 4/2 + 1/2 = 13/2 pi
That is 3 complete circles, then 1/2 pi.
The terminal ray is on the positive y-axis.
Nice copy:
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Originally posted by Antlers86 View PostSomeone post a simple math problem last week and 75% of TBH couldn't solve it and you post this!
Good luck!
I'm part of the 99% that will pass on even trying to solve this one!
Someone solved it? The reposes were making my brain hurt.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Comment
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Originally posted by DesertDug View PostA full circle is 2 pi.
When the angle is greater than 2 pi,
you subtract 2 pi and the remainder gives you the location of the terminal ray.
Since you have a fraction, I'll use 4/2 pi
13/2 - 4/2 = 9/2 - 4/2 = 5/2 - 4/2 = 1/2 pi
Check: 4/2 + 4/2 + 4/2 + 1/2 = 13/2 pi
That is 3 complete circles, then 1/2 pi.
The terminal ray is on the positive y-axis.
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