The angles around the circumference of a sphere add up to 360 degrees.
There are no corners to a sphere because a sphere should have no vertices.
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i thought about a way to get a possible answer, I'm not sure if its right, but for me, it seems the best answer i multiplied half of degrees in a circle (180) by 360, and got 64800. but, because there's 3 axis, i then multiplied that by 3 (one for each axis: X, Y and Z) and got my final answer: 194400 degrees in a sphere. as i said, I'm not sure if its right. but its the best answer i could get, and its simple to understand
The angles around the circumference of a sphere add up to 360 degrees.
Spheres are measured with solid angles (which are like two dimensional angles). These angles can be measure with square degrees or steradians. A sphere measures 129300/π square degrees (or about 41,253 square degrees). A sphere measures 4π steradians (or about 12.566 steradians.)
We can't say how many degrees there are in a sphere, any more than we can say how many feet there are in an acre. Feet are a measure of length, and an acre is an area, not a length. You can't measure an area with a tape measure. Likewise, degrees are a measure of an angle; you can sweep out a circle by swinging a line through an angle of 360 degrees. But you can't sweep out a sphere by swinging a line through some angle, so angle measure won't do to measure a sphere.
BACKGROUND: An item has a maximum of 6 degrees of freedom; 3 degrees of translation (motion in a straight line) and 3 degrees of rotation. The textbook answer to this question is 3 degrees of freedom. What do I mean by the "textbook" answer? I mean that the sphere and spherical bowl fit together correctly so that while the ball will rotate smoothly in any direction, the ball fits tightly enough that it will not move in a straight line in any direction.
360 degrees
360 * unless you are working on the surface of a sphere. OK Ok we live on a sphere but we usually ignore that fact. Correction....oblate spheroid And that is tessellation.
In a plane (i.e. a sheet of paper) its 180 degrees; on a sphere its always greater than 180.
it's called degrees
That's correct! On the surface of a sphere, the sum of the angles of a triangle can be less than 180 degrees or more than 180 degrees depending on the size of the triangle and the curvature of the sphere. If the triangle is small enough compared to the size of the sphere, the sum will be approximately 180 degrees, but this is not always the case.
The largest constellation on the celestial sphere is Hydra the Sea Serpent and it is 100° long.
Sphere is one syllable: sphere.
Yes because there are 360 degrees around a sphere.