0 degrees
It is a right angle (a 900 angle).
Multiply the speed by the cosine of the angle (25 degrees in this case). For the vertical velocity, multiply by the sine of 25 degrees.Multiply the speed by the cosine of the angle (25 degrees in this case). For the vertical velocity, multiply by the sine of 25 degrees.Multiply the speed by the cosine of the angle (25 degrees in this case). For the vertical velocity, multiply by the sine of 25 degrees.Multiply the speed by the cosine of the angle (25 degrees in this case). For the vertical velocity, multiply by the sine of 25 degrees.
because 360 degrees is the total amount of degrees you can get. the degrees are essentially the angle measurement. anything that is 180 degrees is a vertical. so vertical angels are used to indicated a 180degree line.
33 degrees perpendicular to the horizon
An angle of 43 degrees cannot be a vertical angle. A vertical angle, by definition, is 90 degrees
It is 47 degrees.
90 degrees.
zero
0 degrees
It is a right angle (a 900 angle).
Multiply the speed by the cosine of the angle (25 degrees in this case). For the vertical velocity, multiply by the sine of 25 degrees.Multiply the speed by the cosine of the angle (25 degrees in this case). For the vertical velocity, multiply by the sine of 25 degrees.Multiply the speed by the cosine of the angle (25 degrees in this case). For the vertical velocity, multiply by the sine of 25 degrees.Multiply the speed by the cosine of the angle (25 degrees in this case). For the vertical velocity, multiply by the sine of 25 degrees.
Anything above 90 degrees.
because 360 degrees is the total amount of degrees you can get. the degrees are essentially the angle measurement. anything that is 180 degrees is a vertical. so vertical angels are used to indicated a 180degree line.
A vertical angle is perpendicular to a horizontal base and equals 90 degrees
33 degrees perpendicular to the horizon
The angle of projection affects the maximum height by determining the vertical and horizontal components of the initial velocity. At 90 degrees (vertical), all the initial velocity is vertical which results in maximum height. As the angle decreases from 90 degrees, the vertical component decreases, leading to a lower maximum height.