I'm going to assume that the ' 7.51 ' is the angle expressed in radians.
So this is just like any other unit conversion exercise.
You know that 180 degrees = pi radians.
Divide each side by pi radians, and you have
180 degrees / pi radians = 1 .
Great ! Now take the angle you have ... 7.51 radians ...
and multiply it by ' 1 '.
(7.51 radians) x (180 degrees / pi radians) =
<em> </em> (7.51 x 180 / pi) degrees =<em> 430.29 degrees</em>
As you ( I ) worked through this problem, a very useful number
fell out . . . It's 180/pi = 57.296 , or just <em>57.3</em> is close enough.
Here's how you can use that number:
-- 1 radian = <u>57.3</u> degrees
-- 1 degree = 1/57.3 of a radian
-- Got some radians ? Multiply by <u>57.3</u> to get degrees.
-- Got some degrees ? Divide by <u>57.3</u> to get radians.
Answer: DC = 4
Step-by-step explanation: Because it is going 1 subtract everytime
Haven't done this in awhile but i got
63x (2/9-6)
63x (0.2-6)
-364