Rad to Rev
Turn radians into full-turn values for cycle and rotation comparisons.
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Conversion Formula
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Rad to Rev Table
| Radians | Revolutions |
|---|---|
| 0.1 | 0.01591549 |
| 0.5 | 0.07957747 |
| 1 | 0.15915494 |
| 2 | 0.31830989 |
| 3.14159265 | 0.5 |
| 6.28318531 | 1 |
| 10 | 1.59154943 |
| 12.56637061 | 2 |
| 20 | 3.18309886 |
| 31.41592654 | 5 |
Popular Conversions
- 0.1 radians = 0.01591549 revolutions
- 0.5 radians = 0.07957747 revolutions
- 1 radians = 0.15915494 revolutions
- 2 radians = 0.31830989 revolutions
- 3.14159265 radians = 0.5 revolutions
- 6.28318531 radians = 1 revolutions
- 10 radians = 1.59154943 revolutions
- 12.56637061 radians = 2 revolutions
What is Radian and Revolution?
Radian
Definition: A radian is an angle based on arc length and circle radius, with a full circle equal to 2 pi radians.
History/origin: Radians became the natural angle unit for higher mathematics because they simplify formulas.
Current use: Radians are used in trigonometry, calculus, physics, and engineering.
Revolution
Definition: A revolution is one complete turn around a circle.
History/origin: Turn-based angle language came from mechanics, astronomy, and everyday rotation descriptions.
Current use: Revolutions are used in machinery, motion, bearings, and cycle-based counting.
Related Angle and Slope Conversions
These angle relationships help when a drawing, machine setting, or slope note uses a different format.
| Related Conversion | Factor or Rule | Formula |
|---|---|---|
| Rad to deg | 180 / pi | degrees = radians x 180 / pi |
| Rad to rev | 1 / (2 pi) | revolutions = radians / (2 pi) |
| Percent slope to degrees | atan(percent / 100) | degrees = arctan(percent / 100) x 180 / pi |
| Degrees to radians | pi / 180 | radians = degrees x pi / 180 |
| Revolutions to degrees | x 360 | degrees = revolutions x 360 |
| Revolutions to radians | x 2 pi | radians = revolutions x 2 pi |
| Slope ratio to percent | x 100 | percent slope = rise / run x 100 |
| Degrees to percent slope | tan(angle) x 100 | percent slope = tan(degrees) x 100 |
Typical Use Cases
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Why do radians and degrees use different numbers for the same angle?
A: They are different angle scales. Degrees divide a full turn into 360 parts, while radians measure angle from arc length relative to radius.
Q: What is a quick checkpoint for Rad to Rev?
A: 0.5 radians equals 0.07957747 revolutions, which is useful when checking whether pi-based angle work is moving in the correct direction.
Q: When are radians more useful than degrees?
A: Radians are often preferred in calculus, physics, and trigonometric formulas, while degrees are easier to read in everyday geometry and navigation-style contexts.
Q: Why does pi appear in angle conversions so often?
A: Because a full circle is 2pi radians. That fixed relationship is what links radians, degrees, and revolutions.
Q: How do I turn revolutions back into radians?
A: radians = revolutions x 2 pi. Use the reverse rule whenever the angle is already expressed in the target notation.
Q: Is this exact or approximate?
A: The calculation uses an exact factor.
