Tangent of 30 degrees is 0.577
0.577
30*30
tangent of 30 degrees = 1/2 of the square root of 3 = roughly 0.5773
30 degrees or pi/6
The inverse tangent is 0.83448691252602 degrees.
The tangent-tangent angle is formed by two tangents drawn from a point outside a circle to points on the circle. To find the measure of the tangent-tangent angle, you take half the difference of the intercepted arcs. In this case, the arcs measure 135 degrees and 225 degrees. Therefore, the measure of the tangent-tangent angle is (\frac{1}{2} (225^\circ - 135^\circ) = \frac{1}{2} (90^\circ) = 45^\circ).
The tangent of 3 radians is approximately -0.427. This value can be calculated using a scientific calculator or a trigonometric table. In degrees, the tangent of 3 radians is equivalent to the tangent of about 171.89 degrees.
30*30
The tangent of 30 degrees is equal to ( \frac{1}{\sqrt{3}} ) or approximately 0.577. This value can also be expressed as ( \frac{\sqrt{3}}{3} ) when rationalized. In a right triangle, it represents the ratio of the opposite side to the adjacent side for the angle of 30 degrees.
30 degrees Celsius = 86 degrees Fahrenheit
The tangent of 75 degrees is: 3.7320507852401
tangent of 30 degrees = 1/2 of the square root of 3 = roughly 0.5773
The tangent of 89 degrees is: 57.3
Tangent is 0.5317
30 degrees or pi/6
The cotangent function is the reciprocal of the tangent function, so cot(115 degrees) is equivalent to 1/tan(115 degrees). Since tan(115 degrees) is equivalent to -tan(65 degrees) due to the periodicity of the tangent function, cot(115 degrees) simplifies to -tan(65 degrees), which corresponds to option A.
Yes, the sine decreases, and so does the tangent.
The question seems to be incomplete!