Angle reduction is a key technique in trigonometry that simplifies complex angles into more manageable ones. When given an angle, like 650 degrees, you might notice it's much larger than 360 degrees, the total degrees in a full circle. Angles greater than 360 degrees wrap around the circle multiple times, repeating themselves every 360 degrees. This is similar to how the hands of a clock repeat every 12 hours.
To reduce the angle, you subtract 360 degrees until the angle falls within the 0 to 360-degree range. For 650 degrees:
- Subtract 360 once: 650 - 360 = 290 degrees.
This reduced angle, 290 degrees, is equivalent to 650 degrees within a basic circle, meaning it points to the same position on the circle's circumference. Angle reduction helps in finding reference angles and evaluating trigonometric functions efficiently.