360 degrees is one full turn- a complete circle.
270 degrees is 3/4 of a turn
Cos(30) = sqrt(3)/2 = 0.866025403.... ( Which is irrational).
Assuming that you mean 270 degrees and not radians or any of the other angular measures, the answer is 3/4.
If the 49.5 is in radians, then sin 49.5 ≈ −0.693 and so yes. If the 49.5 is in degrees, then sin 49.5o ≈ 0.760 If the 49.5 is in gradians, then sin 49.5 ≈ 0.702 If the 49.5 is in some other angle measurement, then you'll have to decide as I only know Degrees, Radians and Gradians angle measures. In Degrees, one full turn is 360o In Radians, one full turn is 2π radians ≈ 6.283 radians In Gradians, one full turn is 400 gradians. Radians are most useful in calculus. In fact you've used radians without realising it: The length of an arc of angle θ of a circle of radius r is θr when θ is measured in radians; the length of an arc of a circle round one full turn (ie the circumference of a circle) is θr = 2πr since one full turn is 2π in radians.
1/2
An angle is measured in degrees, which is a unit of angular measurement equal to 1/360 of a full rotation. This means that a full turn is equivalent to 360 degrees. As a fraction of a full turn, an angle can be represented as a numerator over 360, where the numerator is the number of degrees the angle measures. For example, a right angle measures 90 degrees, which can be expressed as 90/360 or 1/4 of a full turn.
180 degrees is half of a full turn, which is equivalent to 1/2 of a turn. This is because a full turn is 360 degrees, so half of that would be 180 degrees. Therefore, 180 degrees can be expressed as the fraction 1/2 when referring to a complete turn.
360 degrees is one full turn- a complete circle.
the fraction would be 18 over 100
34/360 = 17/180
explain how the fractions can be used to work out what frction of a full turn iss 40 degrees
A full turn is 360 degrees Therefore 144 degrees = 144/360 turn = 12/30 = 6/15 = 2/5 turn
1/360 There are 360 degrees in a full turn
In full turn,there are 360 degrees.
1, or 100%. 360 degrees is a full circle, so a 360-degree turn is to turn completely around and continue in the same direction.
It is: 1/4 of a 360 degree turn