A circle has no straight sides but if you mean a circle that has been divided into 5 equal sectors then the angle of each sector is 72 degrees subtended by each arc of the circle.
The total circumference is (arc length) times (360) divided by (the angle degrees)
Do you mean a Pie chart? It looks mostly like a circle. Specifically, a circle whose interior is divided into parts: a right angle to represent a quarter of the whole, a 60-degree angle for 1/6, a 45-degree angle for 1/8, and other such sectors for similar divisions.
a 60-degree angle
A 180-degree arc is also called a half-circle.
It is 60 degrees
60
Since a full circle is 360°, a 331° angle is the outside measure of a 29° angle.
180 degrees, if you mean a half circle
-- Circumference of the circle = (pi) x (radius) -- length of the intercepted arc/circumference = degree measure of the central angle/360 degrees
A circle has no straight sides but if you mean a circle that has been divided into 5 equal sectors then the angle of each sector is 72 degrees subtended by each arc of the circle.
A circle is 360 degrees, so 360/14 gives the measure of the angle of the 14 equal parts (which would be wedges). So, quick answer: about 25.7 degrees
It is 360 degrees divided by 6 = 60 degrees each.
The total circumference is (arc length) times (360) divided by (the angle degrees)
The distance around the circle created by the angle. If an angle has a measure of 1 radians, it means that if you drew the angle out from the center and measured the distance along the circumference of the circle between the two arms, it would be equal to the radius of the circle. Or, you can convert to radians from degrees. To do this simply multiply the degree measure by pi over 180
An angle can have up to 180 degree's. A circle can have up to 360 degrees. An angle with 180 degrees is a straight line. If you went any farther than it would change into a 179 degree angle, and so on.
Do you mean a Pie chart? It looks mostly like a circle. Specifically, a circle whose interior is divided into parts: a right angle to represent a quarter of the whole, a 60-degree angle for 1/6, a 45-degree angle for 1/8, and other such sectors for similar divisions.