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< User:JsfasdF252 yOuR tExT #0°: fundamental #90°: fundamental

Further angles

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Exact trigonometric table for multiples of 3 degrees.

Values outside the [0°, 45°] angle range are trivially derived from these values, using circle axis reflection symmetry. (See List of trigonometric identities.)

In the entries below, when a certain number of degrees is related to a regular polygon, the relation is that the number of degrees in each angle of the polygon is (n – 2) times the indicated number of degrees (where n is the number of sides). This is because the sum of the angles of any n-gon is 180° × (n – 2) and so the measure of each angle of any regular n-gon is 180° × (n – 2) ÷ n. Thus for example the entry "45°: square" means that, with n = 4, 180° ÷ n = 45°, and the number of degrees in each angle of a square is (n – 2) × 45° = 90°.

0°: fundamental

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1.5°: regular hecatonicosagon (120-sided polygon)

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1.875°: regular enneacontahexagon (96-sided polygon)

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2.25°: regular octacontagon (80-sided polygon)

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2.8125°: regular hexacontatetragon (64-sided polygon)

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3°: regular hexacontagon (60-sided polygon)

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3.75°: regular tetracontaoctagon (48-sided polygon)

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4.5°: regular tetracontagon (40-sided polygon)

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5.625°: regular triacontadigon (32-sided polygon)

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6°: regular triacontagon (30-sided polygon)

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7.5°: regular icositetragon (24-sided polygon)

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9°: regular icosagon (20-sided polygon)

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11.25°: regular hexadecagon (16-sided polygon)

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12°: regular pentadecagon (15-sided polygon)

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15°: regular dodecagon (12-sided polygon)

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75°: sum 30° + 45°

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18°: regular decagon (10-sided polygon)[1]

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72°: sum 36° + 36°

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21°: sum 9° + 12°

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22.5°: regular octagon

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, the silver ratio

67.5°: sum 7.5° + 60°

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24°: sum 12° + 12°

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27°: sum 12° + 15°

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30°: regular hexagon

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60°: equilateral triangle

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33°: sum 15° + 18°

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36°: regular pentagon

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[1]
where φ is the golden ratio;

54°: sum 27° + 27°

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39°: sum 18° + 21°

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42°: sum 21° + 21°

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45°: square

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Foo

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Baz

  1. ^ a b Bradie, Brian (Sep 2002). "Exact values for the sine and cosine of multiples of 18°: A geometric approach". The College Mathematics Journal. 33 (4): 318–319. doi:10.2307/1559057. JSTOR 1559057.