Quizzes & Puzzles3 mins ago
Radians
Why don't people use radians more instead of degrees?
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Try labelling a protractor in radians, Molly, and then teaching primary school children about the measurement of angles using one of those protractors. Then you'll understand why degrees are easier to use. (Telling young children that a full turn can be divided, courtesy of the Babylonians, into 360 degrees is easy enough. You try explaining to them that a full turn can be divided into an irrational number of units!).
Just a point of correction, jomifl, to avoid anybody getting confused:
“..15 degrees of longitude = 1hour and 1 min of longitude = 1 nautical mile.”
First part correct. Second part incorrect. One minute of Latitude is approximately equal to a nautical mile.
The distance covered by one minute of longitude varies depending on latitude. It is approximately one nautical mile at the equator but reduces to zero at the poles.
“..15 degrees of longitude = 1hour and 1 min of longitude = 1 nautical mile.”
First part correct. Second part incorrect. One minute of Latitude is approximately equal to a nautical mile.
The distance covered by one minute of longitude varies depending on latitude. It is approximately one nautical mile at the equator but reduces to zero at the poles.
I say an approximation, (with tongue firmly in my cheek), because nobody has yet produced an exact value for π. The full number of digits after the decimal point still hasn't been determined. 2.7 trillion, and still counting, according to this...
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/8442255.stm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/8442255.stm