22/45 of 360 degrees = 22/45 x 360 = 7920/45 = 176 degrees
Any angle (in standard position) between zero and 90 degrees is in the first quadrant.
There are different standard forms for different things. There is a standard form for scientific notation. There is a standard form for the equation of a line, circle, ellipse, hyperbola and so on.
9
The distance from any point on the circle to the origin
Two points do not provide enough information to define a circle: a minimum of three points is required to uniquely define a circle unless one of the points happens to be the centre and the other is on the circle. In that case, however, it is necessary to know which is which.
Co-terminal angles are angles that share the same terminal side when drawn in standard position, differing only by an integer multiple of 360 degrees (or 2π radians). For example, 30 degrees and 390 degrees are co-terminal because if you add 360 degrees to 30, you arrive at 390. This concept is useful in trigonometry, as it allows for simplification of angle measurements and calculations. In essence, co-terminal angles represent the same direction or position on the unit circle.
When a circle is rotated about a line that lies in the same plane as the circle and does not intersect it, the three-dimensional figure formed is a cylinder. If the line is outside the circle and parallel to its axis, the result is a cylindrical shell. If the line is the diameter of the circle, the figure formed is a sphere. The specific shape depends on the position of the line relative to the circle.
It's called a centered trochoid.
Draw a picture of this you will see that you can form a triangle with the radius of the circle being 1. This is the hypotenus of the triangle Using trig, x = cos 50 y = sin 50 P is (x,y) = P is (cos 50,sin 50) = (0.643, 0.766)
a sphere
Its width is the diameter of the circle formed by the rotating blades, it has two heights, the height to the top of the tower and the height to the top of the circle formed by the rotating blades.
draw a circle
Any angle (in standard position) between zero and 90 degrees is in the first quadrant.
cad man to .
Since a sinusoidal waveform is really based off of a rotating circle you can describe its position in time using polar coordinates (magnitude, phase angle) OR put that circle on a Cartesian plane and describe it with normal x and y coordinates (instead of x and y we call it real and imaginary because the sinusoids we see are really just the up and down parts, aka 1 of the 2 dimensions, of the entire rotating circle).
Unpaved Runways
rotating your hips in a circle while the rest of your body stays upright