Radians and degrees (2 Viewers)

aleks9797

New Member
Joined
Jun 19, 2012
Messages
27
Gender
Male
HSC
2012
Are we allowed to convert a radian question to degrees so we can understand it better but then convert it back to radians when needed. E.g. converting it back for the final answer or when doing a formula working with radians.
 

aleks9797

New Member
Joined
Jun 19, 2012
Messages
27
Gender
Male
HSC
2012
The three circle equations. Degrees would just be used to help when doing stuff like "supplementary angles" and those stuff. But the first formulas for sector, arc length and section would all be done in radians. No forumulas using degrees, just rough working out. 190 degrees - 70 degrees etc
 

Jashua_Long

Banned
Joined
Oct 15, 2012
Messages
58
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
N/A
Are we allowed to convert a radian question to degrees so we can understand it better but then convert it back to radians when needed. E.g. converting it back for the final answer or when doing a formula working with radians.
Can do whatever you want as long as you give your FINAL answer in the format they want.

If they give the range as 0<=x<=360 , you give your answer in degrees

If they give the range as 0<=x<=2pi , you give your answer in radians.


I always like to work in degrees when doing trig equations. Then, if they gave the question with the range in terms of pi, I just convert the degree answers into radians.
 
Last edited:

bladeys

Member
Joined
Sep 11, 2011
Messages
304
Gender
Female
HSC
N/A
yea just do it on a scrap piece of paper and do it properly on your exam paper i guess
 

Eduard_Khil

CASIO fx-82ES PLUS
Joined
Feb 7, 2012
Messages
157
Location
NSW
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
yeah it's perfectly fine, as long as you put it back as required,but basically, if you're doing the sector questions, you want to almost always be doing it in radians, unless they specify it for some reason, of course. Also keep in mind whether or not they want it in exact form or what not LOL
 

rsagar

Member
Joined
Jul 14, 2011
Messages
44
Location
Somewhere on Earth
Gender
Male
HSC
2012
Uni Grad
2016
+ if it helps...

Have your degree values and then convert them to radian values underneath the degree value
FOR E.g.

45 - 90 - 135 - 180...
pi/4 - pi/2 - 3pi/2 - pi...
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 2)

Top