1 all-the-way-around is 360 degrees
2 revolutions = 720 degrees
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6 revolutions = 2,160 degrees
no, velocity=displacement/time
Radian is the unit for angular displacement is SI system of units.
angular displacement is a vector quantity when theta (angle) is small, otherwise it is scalar.
Angular displacement dimensions are radians. There are ( 2 ) ( pi ) radians or 360 degrees in one complete circle of displacement. Some treat angular displacement as having no dimensions; however, this is a poor and misleading practice. Angular velocity commonly has dimensions of rad/s or radians per second.
Radians
It is 95.5 radians.
no, velocity=displacement/time
No no its a true vector for infinite angular displacement
No no its a true vector for infinite angular displacement
Radian is the unit for angular displacement is SI system of units.
angular displacement is a vector quantity when theta (angle) is small, otherwise it is scalar.
Angular displacement dimensions are radians. There are ( 2 ) ( pi ) radians or 360 degrees in one complete circle of displacement. Some treat angular displacement as having no dimensions; however, this is a poor and misleading practice. Angular velocity commonly has dimensions of rad/s or radians per second.
Radians
Angular velocity is the measure of angular displacement (in one or the opposite) direction over a unit period of time. In the context of CDs , one unit in which this can be measured is the number of revolutions per second. A constant angular velocity means that the CD is turning through the same angle each second.
It is the rate of change - with respect to time - of the angular displacement.
These are used in lots of engineering problems related to rotation.
Here's the easiest answer: They have different names.....