Unit Circle & Radian Measure Practice Questions, Quiz, and Step-by-Step Lesson - improve your math skills with focused questions and clear explanations.
Unit Circle & Radian Measure Practice Quiz with a Step-by-Step Interactive Lesson
Use the quiz at the top of the page to practice unit circle and radian measure skills: radian definition (arc length over radius), degrees to radians and radians to degrees conversion, unit circle coordinates where \((\cos\theta,\sin\theta)\) gives the point on the circle, special angles and exact trig values for \(\sin\), \(\cos\), and \(\tan\), reference angles and quadrant sign rules, negative angles and symmetry (\(\cos\) even, \(\sin\) odd), and coterminal angles and periodicity (adding \(2\pi\) or \(\pi\) when appropriate). If you want a refresher, click Start lesson to open a step-by-step guide with worked examples and quick checks.
How this unit circle practice works
1. Take the quiz: answer the unit circle and radian measure questions at the top of the page.
2. Open the lesson (optional): review radian measure, degree-radian conversions, unit circle coordinates, special angles, reference angles, and trig sign rules.
3. Retry: return to the quiz and apply unit circle reasoning immediately.
What you will learn in the unit circle & radian measure lesson
Radian measure & conversions
Radian measure as \(\theta=\dfrac{s}{r}\) (arc length over radius)
Degrees to radians: multiply by \(\dfrac{\pi}{180}\)
Radians to degrees: multiply by \(\dfrac{180}{\pi}\)
Unit circle coordinates
The unit circle: \(x^2+y^2=1\)
Point at angle \(\theta\): \((\cos\theta,\sin\theta)\)
Reference angle: the acute angle to the \(x\)-axis
Signs in quadrants for \(\sin\), \(\cos\), and \(\tan\)
Common mistakes (wrong quadrant, wrong sign, mixing reference angle with the original angle)
Exact trig values & periodicity
Special angles: \(\tfrac{\pi}{6},\tfrac{\pi}{4},\tfrac{\pi}{3}\) and related angles
Exact values for \(\sin\), \(\cos\), \(\tan\) using unit circle and triangles
Coterminal angles and periodicity: \(\sin(\theta+2\pi)=\sin\theta\), \(\cos(\theta+2\pi)=\cos\theta\), \(\tan(\theta+\pi)=\tan\theta\)
Back to the quiz
When you are ready, return to the quiz at the top of the page and keep practicing unit circle and radian measure.
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Unit Circle & Radians
Step-by-Step Guide
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Unit Circle & Radian Measure Lesson
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Lesson Overview
Lesson overview
Purpose: Build a clear understanding of radian measure and the unit circle so you can convert between degrees and radians, find reference angles, use quadrant sign rules, and evaluate exact values of \(\sin\), \(\cos\), and \(\tan\) at common angles like \(\tfrac{\pi}{6}\), \(\tfrac{\pi}{4}\), \(\tfrac{\pi}{3}\), \(\tfrac{\pi}{2}\), and beyond (including coterminal angles like \(5\pi/2\)).
Success criteria
Explain radian measure using \(\theta=\dfrac{s}{r}\) (arc length over radius).
Convert degrees to radians and radians to degrees accurately.
Identify coterminal angles by adding/subtracting multiples of \(2\pi\) (or \(360^\circ\)).
Use the unit circle to read coordinates \((\cos\theta,\sin\theta)\).
Recall and use special angle values for \(\sin\) and \(\cos\): \(0,\tfrac{\pi}{6},\tfrac{\pi}{4},\tfrac{\pi}{3},\tfrac{\pi}{2}\) and related angles.
Compute \(\tan\theta\) using \(\tan\theta=\dfrac{\sin\theta}{\cos\theta}\) and recognize when \(\tan\theta\) is undefined.
Find reference angles and apply quadrant sign rules for \(\sin\), \(\cos\), \(\tan\).
Use symmetry identities: \(\cos(-\theta)=\cos\theta\), \(\sin(-\theta)=-\sin\theta\), \(\tan(-\theta)=-\tan\theta\), and periodicity like \(\sin(\theta+2\pi)=\sin\theta\).
Key vocabulary
Radian: a unit of angle where \(\theta=\dfrac{s}{r}\).
Unit circle: the circle \(x^2+y^2=1\) (radius \(1\)), centered at the origin.
Standard position: angle measured from the positive \(x\)-axis, counterclockwise.
Terminal side: the ray that ends the angle in standard position.
Coterminal angles: angles that share the same terminal side (differ by \(2k\pi\)).
Reference angle: the acute angle between the terminal side and the \(x\)-axis.
Quadrantal angles: angles whose terminal side lies on an axis (e.g., \(\tfrac{\pi}{2}\), \(\pi\)).
Periodicity: repeating values, like \(\sin(\theta+2\pi)=\sin\theta\) and \(\tan(\theta+\pi)=\tan\theta\).
Quick pre-check
Pre-check 1: What is the radian measure of a \(60^\circ\) angle?
Hint: \(180^\circ=\pi\) radians, so multiply degrees by \(\dfrac{\pi}{180}\).
Pre-check 2: On the unit circle, what is \((\cos(\pi/2),\sin(\pi/2))\)?
Hint: \(\pi/2\) is the top of the unit circle (positive \(y\)-axis).
Radian Measure
Radian measure and degree-radian conversion
Learning goal: Convert between degrees and radians and interpret radians as a real measurement on a circle.
Key idea
Radian measure connects angles to circles using arc length. If an angle \(\theta\) subtends an arc of length \(s\) on a circle of radius \(r\), then: \[ \theta=\frac{s}{r}. \] On the unit circle (\(r=1\)), the radian measure equals the arc length: \(\theta=s\).
Radian measure: \(\theta=\dfrac{s}{r}\) (arc length divided by radius).
Convert degrees \(\rightarrow\) radians: multiply by \(\dfrac{\pi}{180}\). Convert radians \(\rightarrow\) degrees: multiply by \(\dfrac{180}{\pi}\).
Unit Circle
The unit circle and \((\cos\theta,\sin\theta)\)
Learning goal: Use the unit circle to read \(\cos\theta\) and \(\sin\theta\) as coordinates.
Key idea
The unit circle is the circle \(x^2+y^2=1\) (radius \(1\)). If an angle \(\theta\) is in standard position, the point where its terminal side intersects the unit circle is: \[ (\cos\theta,\;\sin\theta). \]
\(\cos\theta\) is the \(x\)-coordinate
\(\sin\theta\) is the \(y\)-coordinate
Important quadrantal points: \[ 0:(1,0),\quad \frac{\pi}{2}:(0,1),\quad \pi:(-1,0),\quad \frac{3\pi}{2}:(0,-1),\quad 2\pi:(1,0). \]
Worked example
Example: What are \(\cos(\pi/3)\) and \(\sin(\pi/3)\)?
\(\pi/3\) is \(60^\circ\). On the unit circle: \[ (\cos(\pi/3),\sin(\pi/3))=\left(\frac{1}{2},\frac{\sqrt{3}}{2}\right). \] So \(\cos(\pi/3)=\frac{1}{2}\) and \(\sin(\pi/3)=\frac{\sqrt{3}}{2}\).
Try it
Try it 1: What is \(\sin(0)\)?
Hint: At \(\theta=0\), the unit circle point is \((1,0)\), so \(\sin(0)\) is the \(y\)-coordinate.
Try it 2: What is \(\sin\!\left(5\pi/2\right)\)?
Hint: \(5\pi/2=2\pi+\pi/2\). Use periodicity: \(\sin(\theta+2\pi)=\sin\theta\).
Summary
On the unit circle, \((\cos\theta,\sin\theta)\) gives the point at angle \(\theta\).
Quadrantal angles give quick exact values (like \(\sin(\pi/2)=1\), \(\cos(\pi)= -1\)).
Special Angles
Special angles and exact trig values
Learning goal: Recall exact values of \(\sin\), \(\cos\), and \(\tan\) for \(\tfrac{\pi}{6}\), \(\tfrac{\pi}{4}\), \(\tfrac{\pi}{3}\) (and related angles).
Key idea
The special angles come from special right triangles:
Then: \[ \tan\theta=\frac{\sin\theta}{\cos\theta}, \] and \(\tan\theta\) is undefined when \(\cos\theta=0\) (e.g., \(\theta=\pi/2\)).
Worked example
Example: What is \(\tan(\pi/6)\)?
Use \(\tan\theta=\dfrac{\sin\theta}{\cos\theta}\). \[ \tan\left(\frac{\pi}{6}\right)=\frac{\sin(\pi/6)}{\cos(\pi/6)}=\frac{\frac12}{\frac{\sqrt3}{2}}=\frac{1}{\sqrt3}=\frac{\sqrt3}{3}. \]
Hint: Use \(\tan\theta=\dfrac{\sin\theta}{\cos\theta}\) and the special triangle values at \(30^\circ\).
Summary
Special angles give exact values for \(\sin\) and \(\cos\), then \(\tan=\dfrac{\sin}{\cos}\).
Memorize or reconstruct values for \(\tfrac{\pi}{6},\tfrac{\pi}{4},\tfrac{\pi}{3}\) using triangles or a unit circle chart.
Reference Angles
Reference angles and quadrant sign rules
Learning goal: Find reference angles and choose the correct sign for \(\sin\), \(\cos\), and \(\tan\) based on the quadrant.
Key idea
A reference angle is the acute angle between the terminal side of \(\theta\) and the \(x\)-axis. It helps you use a known special-angle value and then apply the correct sign by quadrant.
For an angle \(\theta\) in \([0,2\pi)\):
Quadrant I: \(\alpha=\theta\)
Quadrant II: \(\alpha=\pi-\theta\)
Quadrant III: \(\alpha=\theta-\pi\)
Quadrant IV: \(\alpha=2\pi-\theta\)
Sign rules:
QI: \(\sin,+\;\cos,+\;\tan,+\)
QII: \(\sin,+\;\cos,-\;\tan,-\)
QIII: \(\sin,-\;\cos,-\;\tan,+\)
QIV: \(\sin,-\;\cos,+\;\tan,-\)
Worked example
Example: What is the reference angle for \(5\pi/4\) radians?
\(5\pi/4=225^\circ\), which is in Quadrant III. The reference angle in QIII is: \[ \alpha=\theta-\pi=\frac{5\pi}{4}-\pi=\frac{5\pi}{4}-\frac{4\pi}{4}=\frac{\pi}{4}. \]
Try it
Try it 1: What is the sign of \(\sin\!\left(\tfrac{2\pi}{3}\right)\)?
Hint: \(2\pi/3=120^\circ\) lies in Quadrant II, where \(\sin\) is positive.
Try it 2: What is \(\tan\!\left(\tfrac{2\pi}{3}\right)\)?
Hint: \(2\pi/3\) has reference angle \(\pi/3\), and \(\tan\) is negative in Quadrant II.
Summary
Reference angle gives the “special angle” size; quadrant gives the sign.
Always identify the quadrant before assigning \(+\) or \(-\) to \(\sin\), \(\cos\), \(\tan\).
Symmetry
Negative angles and even/odd identities
Learning goal: Use symmetry to evaluate trig functions for negative angles quickly and correctly.
Key idea
The unit circle is symmetric, which creates powerful identities:
Cosine is even: \(\cos(-\theta)=\cos(\theta)\)
Sine is odd: \(\sin(-\theta)=-\sin(\theta)\)
Tangent is odd: \(\tan(-\theta)=-\tan(\theta)\)
These let you convert a negative angle into a positive angle you already know.
Worked example
Example: What is \(\cos(-\pi)\)?
Cosine is even, so \(\cos(-\pi)=\cos(\pi)\). On the unit circle, \(\pi\) corresponds to the point \((-1,0)\), so: \[ \cos(\pi)=-1 \quad\Rightarrow\quad \cos(-\pi)=-1. \]
Try it
Try it 1: What is \(\cos(-\pi/3)\)?
Hint: \(\cos\) is even, so \(\cos(-\pi/3)=\cos(\pi/3)\).
Try it 2: What is \(\sin(-\pi/2)\)?
Hint: \(\sin\) is odd, so \(\sin(-\pi/2)=-\sin(\pi/2)\).
Summary
\(\cos\) is even; \(\sin\) and \(\tan\) are odd.
Use symmetry to turn negative angles into familiar positive angles.
Periodicity
Coterminal angles and periodic trig functions
Learning goal: Reduce angles using periodicity and evaluate trig functions at angles beyond \(2\pi\).
Key idea
Angles are coterminal if they differ by a full rotation: \[ \theta \text{ and } \theta + 2k\pi \quad (k\in\mathbb{Z}). \] Trigonometric functions repeat: \[ \sin(\theta+2\pi)=\sin\theta,\quad \cos(\theta+2\pi)=\cos\theta,\quad \tan(\theta+\pi)=\tan\theta. \] This lets you simplify angles like \(5\pi/2\), \(11\pi/6\), \(9\pi/4\), and more.
Worked example
Example: What is \(\cos\!\left(5\pi/2\right)\)?
Reduce the angle: \[ 5\pi/2 = 2\pi + \pi/2. \] Using periodicity, \(\cos(5\pi/2)=\cos(\pi/2)=0\).
Try it
Try it 1: What is \(\sin\!\left(11\pi/6\right)\)?
Hint: \(11\pi/6\) is in Quadrant IV with reference angle \(\pi/6\). Sine is negative in QIV.
Try it 2: What is \(\tan\!\left(4\pi/3\right)\)?
Hint: \(4\pi/3\) is in Quadrant III with reference angle \(\pi/3\). Tangent is positive in QIII.
Summary
Use coterminal angles: replace \(\theta\) with \(\theta\pm 2\pi\) to land on a familiar angle.
Periodicity: \(\sin,\cos\) repeat every \(2\pi\); \(\tan\) repeats every \(\pi\).
Big Picture
Why the unit circle and radians matter
Learning goal: Connect unit circle skills to graphs and applications — then finish with a final check.
Where the unit circle shows up
Trig graphs: \(\sin\theta\) and \(\cos\theta\) waves come directly from the unit circle coordinates.
Calculus: derivatives and integrals of \(\sin\) and \(\cos\) assume radians for standard formulas.
Physics: circular motion and angular speed use radians naturally (\(\omega\) in rad/s).
Complex numbers: \(e^{i\theta}=\cos\theta+i\sin\theta\) links the unit circle to rotations.
Worked example: tangent with a reference angle
Example: What is \(\tan\!\left(\tfrac{3\pi}{4}\right)\)?
\(\tfrac{3\pi}{4}=135^\circ\) lies in Quadrant II. The reference angle is \(\pi/4\), and \(\tan(\pi/4)=1\). Tangent is negative in Quadrant II, so: \[ \tan\left(\frac{3\pi}{4}\right)=-1. \]
Try it
Try it 1: What is \(\sin\!\left(\pi/2\right)\)?
Hint: \(\pi/2\) is the top of the unit circle at \((0,1)\).
Try it 2: What is \(\sin\!\left(3\pi/4\right)\)?
Hint: \(3\pi/4\) is in Quadrant II with reference angle \(\pi/4\). Sine is positive in QII.
Final recap
Radians measure angle by arc length: \(\theta=\dfrac{s}{r}\). Convert degrees \(\leftrightarrow\) radians using \(\dfrac{\pi}{180}\) and \(\dfrac{180}{\pi}\).
Unit circle coordinates: \((\cos\theta,\sin\theta)\). Cosine is \(x\); sine is \(y\).
Special angles (\(\tfrac{\pi}{6},\tfrac{\pi}{4},\tfrac{\pi}{3}\)) give exact values; \(\tan=\dfrac{\sin}{\cos}\).
Reference angles + quadrant signs keep your answers correct for any angle.
Symmetry: \(\cos(-\theta)=\cos\theta\), \(\sin(-\theta)=-\sin\theta\). Periodicity: \(\sin,\cos\) repeat every \(2\pi\); \(\tan\) repeats every \(\pi\).
Next step: Close this lesson and try your quiz again. If you miss a question, reopen the book and review the page that matches the unit circle skill you need (conversion, special angles, reference angles, symmetry, or periodicity).