Why Do We Need a New Unit?
You already know degree measure:
- One full rotation = 360°
- Right angle = 90°, straight angle = 180°
But why 360? That number is a historical convention, not a mathematical necessity.
Today we learn a unit tied directly to the geometry of the circle.
Defining a Radian from Arc Length
A radian: central angle subtending an arc equal in length to the radius.
- Draw a circle with radius
- Mark an arc of length
along the circumference - That central angle = 1 radian
On the unit circle (
The Unit Circle with One Radian
The arc from
How Many Radians in a Full Circle?
The circumference of the unit circle is
Since each radian corresponds to an arc of length 1:
About 6.28 radians fit around the full circle.
Quick Check: Radians in a Full Circle
About how many radians fit around a full circle?
Think before the next slide...
- (A) 3.14
- (B) 6.28
- (C) 180
- (D) 360
On the Unit Circle, Radian Equals Arc Length
On the unit circle (
- Arc length
- So: radian measure equals arc length
This one-to-one correspondence is why radians appear throughout higher mathematics.
"2 radians" means an arc of length 2 on the unit circle.
One Fact Connects Degrees and Radians
Full rotation:
Everything else follows from this one equation.
| Degrees | Radians |
|---|---|
Comparing the Degree and Radian Systems
- Degrees: divide full circle into 360 equal parts
- Radians: measure arc length in units of
Deriving the Degree-Radian Conversion Factors
From
Derive the factor; don't memorize it.
Example: Converting 60 ° to Radians
Given:
Step 1: Multiply by
Step 2: Simplify
So
Example: Convert to Degrees
Given:
Step 1: Multiply by
Step 2: Simplify
So
Your Turn: Convert These Angles
Convert
For
For
Try both, then advance for answers.
Quick Check: Degrees to Radians
Convert
What fraction of 180 is 45?
Building the Unit Circle: Axis Angles
Start with the four axis angles from the quarter-circle logic:
| Degrees | Radians | Location |
|---|---|---|
| 90° | top | |
| 180° | left | |
| 270° | bottom | |
| 360° | right (full turn) |
Key Angles: The , , Families
Color coding: sixths (orange), fourths (teal), thirds (yellow).
The Family (Sixths of )
| Radian | Degrees | Quadrant |
|---|---|---|
| 30° | QI | |
| 150° | QII | |
| 210° | QIII | |
| 330° | QIV |
The Family (Fourths of )
| Radian | Degrees | Quadrant |
|---|---|---|
| 45° | QI | |
| 135° | QII | |
| 225° | QIII | |
| 315° | QIV |
The Family (Thirds of )
| Radian | Degrees | Quadrant |
|---|---|---|
| 60° | QI | |
| 120° | QII | |
| 240° | QIII | |
| 300° | QIV |
Worked: Identify and Convert and
- Convert:
- Convert:
Your Turn: Place and
For each angle:
- Which quadrant is it in? (Compare to
, , , ) - Convert to degrees.
- Which family does it belong to? (sixths / fourths / thirds)
Try all three steps for each angle before advancing.
Quick Check: Radian to Position
What is the radian measure of the angle at
Name the exact value — no calculator needed.
Why Radians? Compare the Arc Length Formula
For arc length
| Unit | Formula |
|---|---|
| Radians | |
| Degrees |
Radians eliminate the
Arc Length Formula: Visual Explanation
Radian formula: clean. Degree formula: cluttered.
Arc Length: Two Worked Examples
Problem: A sector has radius
Find the arc length.
The arc length is
Radians in Calculus: Why It Matters
Two derivative formulas that require radian input:
| Formula | Condition |
|---|---|
In degrees: each derivative gains a
Key Takeaways from This Lesson
- Radian: arc length = radius; unit circle:
= arc length - Anchor:
rad; full rotation: rad - Convert:
(deg→rad); (rad→deg) - Key angles:
, , → 30°, 45°, 60°
Watch out: 1 rad ≈ 57.3°, not 60°.
Next: Sine and Cosine on Unit Circle
Coming up — HSF.TF.A.2:
- Define
as the -coordinate and as the -coordinate on the unit circle - Evaluate trig functions in all four quadrants
- Extend definitions to negative angles and angles
The radian measure you learned today is the input to these functions.
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Understand radian measure