I am so happy to be the first person to answer this question on here. The equation for the radius of a 360 degree circle is 360/2(Pi) and of course, once you get the radius all you have to do is double it to get the diameter. So if you take Pi: 3.14159265... and multiply it by two you get: 6.2831853... and then you take that number and divide it into 360 degrees and you get: 57.29577... degrees (The Radius) and then you multiply that by two to get the diameter which is: 114.59155915...degrees, roughly, of course. My resource: The Code by Carl Munck (which you can find on YouTube).
150% of 360 degrees= 150% * 360= 1.5 * 360= 540 degrees
360 degrees * * * * * That is a nonsensical answer. The diameter of a circle is a straight line segment, going from the circumference of the circle, through the centre, to the circumference on the other side.
Divide the arc's degree measure by 360°, then multiply by the circumference of the circle.
A 331 degree angle is a reflex angle and it nearly looks like a circle because there are 360 degrees in a circle.
For a 450 degree angle, you would subtract 360 from 450, which gives you 90 degrees. Therefore, you will draw a 90 degree angle. Explanation below: There are only 360 degrees in a circle. A 450 degree angle would go around a circle once completely, then it would stop at the 90 degree angle mark.
It is a complete circle which consist of 360 degrees
A circle has 360 degrees, whatever its diameter.
There are 360 degrees in a circle and so 1 degree is 1/360
1. Multiply pi (3.14) by the radius of the circle (half of the diameter which is the length of the circle on the widest part).2. Square your result.This uses the formula:Area=πr2where π=3.14
A degree is 1/360 of a circle.
A Circle.
A circle because there are 360 degrees around a circle.
150% of 360 degrees= 150% * 360= 1.5 * 360= 540 degrees
A circle is divided into 360° and each of them is 1° ■
A degree is one measure of angles. There are 360 degrees in a circle and that gives 360 its importance in relation to a circle.
360. There are 360 degrees in every triangle.
A circle. ;-)