Radians–Degrees Conversion

\( \text{radians}=\text{degrees}\times\tfrac{\pi}{180},\qquad \text{degrees}=\text{radians}\times\tfrac{180}{\pi} \)
Trigonometry GCSE

Convert 19π/20 radians to degrees

Tips: use ^ for powers, sqrt() for roots, and type pi for π.
Hint (H)
Multiply by 180/π

Explanation

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Statement

Angles can be measured in two common units: degrees and radians. To convert between them, use:

\[ \text{radians} = \text{degrees} \times \frac{\pi}{180}, \qquad \text{degrees} = \text{radians} \times \frac{180}{\pi}. \]

Here, \(\pi \,\text{radians} = 180^\circ\). This equivalence allows conversion in either direction.

Why it’s true

  • A full circle is \(360^\circ\) but also \(2\pi\) radians.
  • Therefore, \(180^\circ = \pi\) radians, giving the conversion factors.
  • This ratio ensures consistent angle measurement in trigonometry and calculus.

Recipe (how to use it)

  1. If converting degrees to radians, multiply by \(\pi/180\).
  2. If converting radians to degrees, multiply by \(180/\pi\).
  3. Simplify results, leaving exact multiples of \(\pi\) when possible.

Spotting it

Whenever angles appear in trigonometric functions, check whether the question expects degrees or radians. Calculators often have a “mode” setting, so conversions are essential.

Common pairings

  • Trigonometric values (sine, cosine, tangent) in radians vs degrees.
  • Arc length and sector area formulas, which require radians.
  • Calculus, where all angle measures are in radians.

Mini examples

  1. \(90^\circ = 90 \times \pi/180 = \pi/2 \,\text{radians}\).
  2. \(\pi/6 \,\text{radians} = (\pi/6) \times 180/\pi = 30^\circ\).

Pitfalls

  • Forgetting to multiply by the right fraction (e.g. using \(180/\pi\) instead of \(\pi/180\)).
  • Switching calculator mode incorrectly.
  • Not simplifying exact results with \(\pi\).

Exam strategy

  • Always check whether your final answer should be in degrees or radians.
  • If the question involves arc length or calculus, radians are required.
  • Write results exactly in terms of \(\pi\) when appropriate.

Summary

The degree–radian conversion is a core skill in GCSE and beyond. By remembering that \(180^\circ = \pi\) radians, you can confidently switch between units and apply the correct form for trigonometry, geometry, and calculus problems.

Worked examples

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  1. Convert 45° to radians
    1. \( radians = 45 × π/180 \)
    2. \( = π/4 \)
    Answer: π/4
  2. Convert 120° to radians
    1. \( radians = 120 × π/180 \)
    2. \( = 2π/3 \)
    Answer: 2π/3
  3. Convert 270° to radians
    1. \( radians = 270 × π/180 \)
    2. \( = 3π/2 \)
    Answer: 3π/2
  4. Convert 1 radian to degrees
    1. \( degrees = 1 × 180/π \)
    2. ≈ 57.3°
    Answer: 57.3°
  5. Convert π/3 radians to degrees
    1. \( degrees = (π/3) × 180/π \)
    2. \( = 60° \)
    Answer: 60°
  6. Convert 5π/6 radians to degrees
    1. \( degrees = (5π/6) × 180/π \)
    2. \( = 150° \)
    Answer: 150°
  7. Convert 315° to radians
    1. \( radians = 315 × π/180 \)
    2. \( = 7π/4 \)
    Answer: 7π/4
  8. Convert 2 radians to degrees
    1. \( degrees = 2 × 180/π \)
    2. ≈ 114.6°
    Answer: 114.6°
  9. Convert 7π/12 radians to degrees
    1. \( degrees = (7π/12) × 180/π \)
    2. \( = 105° \)
    Answer: 105°
  10. Convert 400° to radians
    1. \( radians = 400 × π/180 \)
    2. \( = 20π/9 \)
    Answer: 20π/9