Key Equations
arc length | [latex]s=r\theta[/latex] |
area of a sector | [latex]A=\frac{1}{2}\theta {r}^{2}[/latex] |
angular speed | [latex]\omega =\frac{\theta }{t}[/latex] |
linear speed | [latex]v=\frac{s}{t}[/latex] |
linear speed related to angular speed | [latex]v=r\omega[/latex] |
Key Concepts
- An angle is formed from the union of two rays, by keeping the initial side fixed and rotating the terminal side. The amount of rotation determines the measure of the angle.
- An angle is in standard position if its vertex is at the origin and its initial side lies along the positive x-axis. A positive angle is measured counterclockwise from the initial side and a negative angle is measured clockwise.
- To draw an angle in standard position, draw the initial side along the positive x-axis and then place the terminal side according to the fraction of a full rotation the angle represents.
- In addition to degrees, the measure of an angle can be described in radians.
- To convert between degrees and radians, use the proportion [latex]\frac{\theta }{180}=\frac{{\theta }^{R}}{\pi }[/latex].
- Two angles that have the same terminal side are called coterminal angles.
- We can find coterminal angles by adding or subtracting 360° or [latex]2\pi[/latex].
- Coterminal angles can be found using radians just as they are for degrees.
- The length of a circular arc is a fraction of the circumference of the entire circle.
- The area of sector is a fraction of the area of the entire circle.
- An object moving in a circular path has both linear and angular speed.
- The angular speed of an object traveling in a circular path is the measure of the angle through which it turns in a unit of time.
- The linear speed of an object traveling along a circular path is the distance it travels in a unit of time.
Glossary
- angle
- the union of two rays having a common endpoint
- angular speed
- the angle through which a rotating object travels in a unit of time
- arc length
- the length of the curve formed by an arc
- area of a sector
- area of a portion of a circle bordered by two radii and the intercepted arc; the fraction [latex]\frac{\theta }{2\pi }[/latex] multiplied by the area of the entire circle
- coterminal angles
- description of positive and negative angles in standard position sharing the same terminal side
- degree
- a unit of measure describing the size of an angle as one-360th of a full revolution of a circle
- initial side
- the side of an angle from which rotation begins
- linear speed
- the distance along a straight path a rotating object travels in a unit of time; determined by the arc length
- measure of an angle
- the amount of rotation from the initial side to the terminal side
- negative angle
- description of an angle measured clockwise from the positive x-axis
- positive angle
- description of an angle measured counterclockwise from the positive x-axis
- quadrantal angle
- an angle whose terminal side lies on an axis
- radian measure
- the ratio of the arc length formed by an angle divided by the radius of the circle
- radian
- the measure of a central angle of a circle that intercepts an arc equal in length to the radius of that circle
- ray
- one point on a line and all points extending in one direction from that point; one side of an angle
- reference angle
- the measure of the acute angle formed by the terminal side of the angle and the horizontal axis
- standard position
- the position of an angle having the vertex at the origin and the initial side along the positive x-axis
- terminal side
- the side of an angle at which rotation ends
- vertex
- the common endpoint of two rays that form an angle
Candela Citations
CC licensed content, Specific attribution
- Precalculus. Authored by: OpenStax College. Provided by: OpenStax. Located at: http://cnx.org/contents/fd53eae1-fa23-47c7-bb1b-972349835c3c@5.175:1/Preface. License: CC BY: Attribution