there is not much difference
There is no difference in meaning between the two. It is usually spelled in lowercase, though (arc tan, or arctan).
Nothing it just has a capital letter
In a circle what is the difference between a central angle and an arc?Read more: In_a_circle_what_is_the_difference_between_a_central_angle_and_an_arc
the world may never know :D
They are normally the same. However, the measure of the arc could refer to the angle subtended at the centre of the radius of curvature.
There is no difference in meaning between the two. It is usually spelled in lowercase, though (arc tan, or arctan).
Nothing it just has a capital letter
In a circle what is the difference between a central angle and an arc?Read more: In_a_circle_what_is_the_difference_between_a_central_angle_and_an_arc
the world may never know :D
They are normally the same. However, the measure of the arc could refer to the angle subtended at the centre of the radius of curvature.
Take a compass, extend it about 3/4 of the length of the segment. Then from one end of the segment, draw a 180 degree arc. From the other end draw another arc. Connect the points where the arcs intersect. Where the line intersects with the segment is the midpoint of the segment. That is how you bisect a segment to find the midpoint - geometrically.
both are derived from latin word arcus means bow arch is a structure in the shape of arc arc is the imaginary shape you can draw
an angle subtended by an arc is double at the center
Arc measure is the number of radians. Two similar arcs could have the same arc measure. Arc length is particular to the individual arc. One must consider the radius of the arc in question then multiply the arc measure (in radians) times the radius to get the length.
In reality, the shape of rainbow is a circle. The center of the circle is an imaginary line between the center of the sun and the head of the viewer.
the time it duration for the action and voltage drop
A mathematical arc is any segment of the circumference of a circle. It is normally expressed in degrees, referring to the angle between the two lines drawn from either end of the arc to the center of the circle. Therefore, a 900 arc is 1/4 of the circle's circumference and a 1800 arc is half the circumference.