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subtended

Subtended describes a geometric relationship in which one object lies under the lines, angle, or arc defined by another. In common mathematical usage, an object is said to subtend an angle, arc, or chord, meaning the angle or arc is intercepted by the endpoints or boundaries of that object.

In circle geometry, a line segment with endpoints on a circle subtends a central angle at the

The phrase also applies to angular size: an object at a given distance subtends a certain angle

In three dimensions, a surface or patch can subtend a solid angle at a point, measured in

Etymology traces to Latin subtendere, meaning to stretch up from underneath or to place beneath. The term

circle’s
center
and
also
subtends
an
arc
of
the
circle
between
those
endpoints.
The
inscribed
angle
that
also
subtends
the
same
arc
lies
on
the
circle
and
equals
half
the
measure
of
the
central
angle.
If
the
circle
has
radius
R
and
the
central
angle
is
theta
(in
radians),
the
chord
length
is
c
=
2R
sin(theta/2)
and
the
subtended
arc
length
is
s
=
R
theta.
at
the
observer.
For
a
straight
object
of
length
L
at
distance
d,
the
exact
angular
size
is
theta
=
2
arctan(L/(2d));
for
small
angles,
theta
≈
L/d
when
theta
is
measured
in
radians.
steradians,
reflecting
how
large
the
object
appears
to
the
observer.
is
used
across
geometry,
trigonometry,
and
optics
to
describe
how
geometric
figures
determine
or
are
determined
by
angles,
arcs,
and
viewing
directions.