Angle Units: Degrees, Radians, Gradians, and More
What Is an Angle?
An angle measures the rotation between two rays sharing a common endpoint, or the fraction of a full rotation. Unlike most physical quantities, an angle is dimensionless — it is a ratio of arc length to radius — but it is assigned units to express how that rotation is measured.
Several systems exist for measuring angles. The choice between them depends on context: degrees are universal in everyday life, radians are fundamental in mathematics and physics, gradians appear in surveying, and arcminutes and arcseconds are essential in navigation and astronomy.
Degrees (°)
The degree divides a full circle into 360 equal parts. This choice of 360 is ancient — attributed to Babylonian astronomy, where a year of roughly 360 days made a 1-degree-per-day approximation convenient. The number 360 also factors neatly: it is divisible by 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 12, 15, 18, 20, 24, 30, 36, 40, 45, 60, 72, 90, 120, and 180.
1 full rotation = 360°
Compass and Navigation
Bearings in navigation are given in degrees clockwise from north: - 0° / 360°: True north - 90°: East - 180°: South - 270°: West
A ship sailing at a bearing of 135° heads southeast. Aircraft use compass headings the same way.
Common Angles
| Angle | Degrees | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Right angle | 90° | Corner of a square |
| Straight angle | 180° | Half rotation, straight line |
| Full rotation | 360° | One complete turn |
| Equilateral triangle interior | 60° | Each corner |
| Regular hexagon interior | 120° | Each interior angle |
Radians (rad)
The radian is the SI unit of angle, defined as the angle subtended at the center of a circle by an arc equal in length to the radius.
1 radian = arc length equal to radius / radius = 1 (dimensionless)
The Critical Relationship: Degrees to Radians
A full circle has circumference 2πr. The arc length for a full rotation equals 2πr, so:
1 full rotation = 2π radians ≈ 6.28318 rad
This gives the fundamental conversion:
180° = π radians 1° = π/180 rad ≈ 0.017453 rad 1 rad = 180°/π ≈ 57.2958°
Why Radians Matter in Mathematics
Radians make calculus and trigonometric identities cleaner. The derivative of sin(x) is cos(x) only when x is in radians. If x were in degrees, a conversion factor of π/180 would appear everywhere. Similarly:
- Arc length: s = r × θ (where θ is in radians)
- Sector area: A = ½ r² θ
- Angular velocity: ω = dθ/dt (radians per second)
A wheel with radius 0.5 m rotating at 10 radians per second has a rim speed of: v = r × ω = 0.5 × 10 = 5 m/s
Key Radian Values
| Degrees | Radians (exact) | Radians (decimal) |
|---|---|---|
| 30° | π/6 | 0.5236 |
| 45° | π/4 | 0.7854 |
| 60° | π/3 | 1.0472 |
| 90° | π/2 | 1.5708 |
| 120° | 2π/3 | 2.0944 |
| 180° | π | 3.14159 |
| 270° | 3π/2 | 4.71239 |
| 360° | 2π | 6.28318 |
Gradians (grad or gon)
The gradian (also called gon) divides a full circle into 400 equal parts:
1 full rotation = 400 gradians 1 gradian = 0.9° = π/200 radians 90° = 100 gradians
Gradians were introduced during the French Revolution as part of the broader metrication effort. A right angle equals exactly 100 gradians, and a slope of 1% equals 0.573° — a convenient relationship for surveyors and civil engineers working with gradients.
Gradian Use in Practice
Most scientific calculators have a "GRAD" mode alongside "DEG" and "RAD." Gradians are used in: - Geodetic surveying (particularly in continental Europe) - Mining engineering - Some forestry applications
A 45° slope (steep hill) equals 50 gradians. A 10-gradian angle equals 9°.
Arcminutes and Arcseconds
Degrees are subdivided using the sexagesimal (base-60) system inherited from Babylonian mathematics:
1° = 60 arcminutes (60') 1 arcminute = 60 arcseconds (60") 1° = 3,600 arcseconds
Navigation
Geographic coordinates use degrees, minutes, and seconds (DMS). The location of the Eiffel Tower is approximately:
48° 51' 29" N, 2° 17' 40" E
Reading this: 48 degrees, 51 arcminutes, 29 arcseconds north latitude; 2 degrees, 17 arcminutes, 40 arcseconds east longitude.
One arcminute of latitude corresponds to 1 nautical mile (1,852 m). This is not a coincidence — the nautical mile was defined from this relationship. One arcsecond of latitude equals about 30.9 meters.
Astronomy
Arcseconds are the primary resolution unit in astronomy. The apparent size of the full Moon is about 30 arcminutes (0.5°). The Hubble Space Telescope can resolve features as small as 0.05 arcseconds. The nearest star beyond the Sun, Proxima Centauri, has a parallax of 0.7687 arcseconds — the measurement that determined its distance of 4.24 light-years.
Parsec: the astronomical distance unit. 1 parsec is the distance at which 1 AU subtends 1 arcsecond. 1 parsec = 3.2616 light-years.
Turns (Rotations)
The turn (also: revolution, rotation, cycle) is simply one complete 360° rotation. It is intuitive and useful when counting full cycles:
1 turn = 360° = 2π radians = 400 gradians
Angular velocity in physics is often expressed in radians per second, but rotational speed in engineering is commonly expressed in revolutions per minute (RPM) or turns per second.
Converting RPM to radians per second: ω (rad/s) = RPM × 2π / 60
A motor at 3,000 RPM: ω = 3,000 × 2π / 60 = 314.16 rad/s
Milliradians (mrad)
The milliradian (mrad) is one-thousandth of a radian. It is widely used in long-range shooting and military applications because at 1,000 meters, 1 mrad subtends almost exactly 1 meter:
1 mrad at 1,000 m ≈ 1 m 1 mrad ≈ 0.05729° 1° ≈ 17.45 mrad
Riflescope adjustments are often quoted in mrad per click. A 0.1 mrad per click scope moves point of impact 1 cm per click at 100 meters.
Key Conversions
| From | To | Multiply by |
|---|---|---|
| Degrees | Radians | π / 180 (≈ 0.017453) |
| Radians | Degrees | 180 / π (≈ 57.2958) |
| Degrees | Gradians | 10/9 (≈ 1.11111) |
| Gradians | Degrees | 9/10 (= 0.9) |
| Radians | Gradians | 200/π (≈ 63.6620) |
| Degrees | Arcminutes | × 60 |
| Arcminutes | Arcseconds | × 60 |
| Degrees | Arcseconds | × 3,600 |
| Turns | Degrees | × 360 |
| Turns | Radians | × 2π |
| Degrees | Milliradians | × 17.4533 |
Explore Angle Conversions
Convert between degrees, radians, gradians, arcminutes, arcseconds, and turns at /angle/.
Summary
Degrees are the default for everyday angle measurement — navigation, architecture, and geometry all use them. Radians are mathematically fundamental: they make calculus clean and define angular velocity. Gradians serve surveying where right-angle = 100 units is convenient. Arcminutes and arcseconds extend the precision of degrees for navigation coordinates and astronomical measurements. Turns express full rotations naturally. Knowing that 360° = 2π rad = 400 grad connects all these systems.
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