# Angle

something that is formed when two rays meet at a single or same point
(Redirected from Straight angle)

When two straight lines come together, they make an angle. The two lines are called the sides[1] of the angle, and they meet at a point. A flat surface (called a plane) also forms an angle when it meets another.

An angle.

To represent an angle, Greek letters such as ${\displaystyle \alpha }$ (alpha), ${\displaystyle \beta }$ (beta), ${\displaystyle \gamma }$ (gamma) and ${\displaystyle \theta }$ (theta) are sometimes used.[2] An angle indicates the space between its sides, or the amount of rotation needed to make one side coincide the other.[3][4]

To measure the size of an angle, we use units called degrees. A degree is a standard unit and we use the symbol ° after a number to show that it is a number of degrees. We can use a decimal number or a fraction for part of a degree, but a degree can also be divided into 60 minutes (1° = 60'), and a minute can be divided into 60 seconds (1' = 60"). So 22.5°, 2212° and 22° 30' are all the same angle.

In mathematics, angles can also be (and often are) measured in radians instead of degrees, by using the conversion factor ${\displaystyle 2\pi {\mbox{ rad}}=360^{\circ }}$ (for example, ${\displaystyle 22.5^{\circ }={\tfrac {\pi }{8}}{\mbox{ rad}}}$). Yet another unit of angle is gradian,[4] with ${\displaystyle 100{\text{ grad}}=90^{\circ }}$.

Angles are studied in geometry, where an angle where edges meet is often called a vertex. For example, the three sides of a triangle are its edges and two of the edges meet at each vertex. Similarly, two of the six sides (or faces) of a cube meet at each of its twelve edges, and three edges meet at each of its eight corners (or vertices, which is the plural version of vertex).

## Types of angles

An acute angle is an angle less than 90° (but more than 0°). A right angle is an angle equal to 90°. An obtuse angle is an angle greater than 90° but less than 180°. A straight angle (or straight line) is an angle equal to 180°. A reflex angle is an angle greater than 180° (but less than 360°).[5]

Supplementary angles are two angles with the sum equal to 180°, and complementary angles are two angles with the sum equal to one right angle (90°). On the other hand, two angles that sum to one full circle (360°) are sometimes called explementary angles, or conjugate angles.

People usually use a protractor to measure and draw angles. Sometimes, people use a 360° protractor to measure angles.

## References

1. Campana, D. M. (2016-09-06). The Teacher of Geometrical Drawing - For High Schools, Manual Training Schools, Technical Schools, Etc. Read Books Ltd. ISBN 978-1-4733-5366-4.
2. "Compendium of Mathematical Symbols". Math Vault. 2020-03-01. Retrieved 2020-08-17.
3. "Definition of angle | Dictionary.com". www.dictionary.com. Retrieved 2020-08-17.
4. Weisstein, Eric W. "Angle". mathworld.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2020-08-17.
5. "Angles - Acute, Obtuse, Straight and Right". www.mathsisfun.com. Retrieved 2020-08-17.