Unit Circle Calculator

#post_title - Mometrix Academy

Angle

Unit

xcosθ
1

ysinθ
0

tanθ
0

Quadrant
I

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Knowing how to use the unit circle is a fundamental skill in trigonometry!

The unit circle is a circle of radius 1 centered at the origin. For any angle \(\theta\) (in degrees or radians), the coordinates of the point on the circle are \((x,y)=(\cos\theta,\ \sin\theta)\).

Angles are measured from the positive \(x\)-axis, counterclockwise positive.

Unit circle diagram featuring angle measurements in degrees and radians, with corresponding trigonometric ratios of side lengths

Quick References

Full Turn

One full turn around the circle is \(360^\circ\), which equals \(2\pi\) radians.

Quadrants

The sign pattern of the coordinates follows the quadrant:

  • Quadrant I: \((+,+)\)
  • Quadrant II: \((-,+)\)
  • Quadrant III: \((-,-)\)
  • Quadrant IV: \((+,-)\)

On the unit circle, the Pythagorean identity always holds:

\(\sin^2\theta+\cos^2\theta=1\)

Tangent is defined by \(\tan\theta=\dfrac{\sin\theta}{\cos\theta}\) whenever \(\cos\theta\neq 0\).

Converting Units

To convert units, multiply degrees by \(\frac{\pi}{180}\) to get radians or multiply radians by \(\frac{180}{\pi}\) to get degrees:

\(\theta_{\text{rad}}=\theta^\circ\cdot\dfrac{\pi}{180}\)

\(\theta^\circ=\theta_{\text{rad}}\cdot\dfrac{180}{\pi}\)

calculator

 

by Mometrix Test Preparation | Last Updated: May 6, 2026