SOLUTION: Change these polar coordinates to rectangular coordinates: (6, 210°). Give your answer in radians and simplify all radicals, if necessary.
Algebra.Com
Question 1180638: Change these polar coordinates to rectangular coordinates: (6, 210°). Give your answer in radians and simplify all radicals, if necessary.
Answer by ikleyn(52915) (Show Source): You can put this solution on YOUR website!
.
Change these polar coordinates to rectangular coordinates: (6, 210°).
Give your answer in radians and simplify all radicals, if necessary.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The answer CAN NOT be given in radians, because the form
of the answer - coordinates in the coordinate plane - are a pair of real numbers and not the angles.
It seems to me that the composer of the post just lost his or her own understanding
on what he (or she) wrote in this episode . . .
RELATED QUESTIONS
Change these rectangular coordinates to polar coordinates: (3, -3). Give your answer in (answered by ikleyn)
Change these polar coordinates to rectangular coordinates: (6,... (answered by ikleyn)
Change the polar coordinates (4Sqrt2, 3pi/4), to rectangular... (answered by funmath)
Change the polar coordinates (4Sqrt2, 3pi/4), to rectangular... (answered by stanbon)
Convert the rectangular point (-8,8sqrt3) to polar coordinates with r>0.
Also give two (answered by stanbon)
When graphed using polar coordinates, the center of a regular nonagon is at the origin... (answered by venugopalramana)
When graphed using polar coordinates, the center of a regular nonagon is at the origin... (answered by venugopalramana)
How do I convert the polar coordinates (6, 150 degree) to rectangular... (answered by lwsshak3)
Convert the polar coordinates point (3, 60º) to rectangular coordinates. (answered by fractalier)