Degrees to Milliradians

Convert degrees to milliradians (mrad).

Author

Prof. Hans Muller

Math editorial contributor

German renewable energy engineer at TU Munich, pioneering grid-scale hydrogen storage solutions

Reviewed by

Dr. Isabella Rossi

Math content reviewer

Italian neuroscientist at Sapienza University of Rome, studying the neural mechanisms of bilingual language processing

Last updatedFebruary 22, 2026

PublishedFebruary 22, 2026

Table of Contents

  1. Reference values
  2. Calculator
  3. Reference table
  4. FAQs
  5. Methodology and review
  6. Related conversions

0 deg =

0 mrad

Representative value from the Degrees to Milliradians reference table.

Reference Values

Browse 25 reference values with individual detail pages for quick lookup.

Browse all reference values

Degrees to Milliradians

Convert degrees to milliradians (mrad).

Calculated Result

Reference Table

Use this complete table for quick lookup and internal linking to specific value pages.

Degrees to Milliradians Reference
DegreesMilliradians
-180 deg-3,141.592654 mrad
-165 deg-2,879.793266 mrad
-150 deg-2,617.993878 mrad
-135 deg-2,356.19449 mrad
-120 deg-2,094.395102 mrad
-105 deg-1,832.595715 mrad
-90 deg-1,570.796327 mrad
-75 deg-1,308.996939 mrad
-60 deg-1,047.197551 mrad
-45 deg-785.398163 mrad
-30 deg-523.598776 mrad
-15 deg-261.799388 mrad
0 deg0 mrad
15 deg261.799388 mrad
30 deg523.598776 mrad
45 deg785.398163 mrad
60 deg1,047.197551 mrad
75 deg1,308.996939 mrad
90 deg1,570.796327 mrad
105 deg1,832.595715 mrad
120 deg2,094.395102 mrad
135 deg2,356.19449 mrad
150 deg2,617.993878 mrad
165 deg2,879.793266 mrad
180 deg3,141.592654 mrad

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about Degrees to Milliradians, formulas, and typical use cases.

What does the Degrees to Milliradians calculator do?

It helps with converting degree-based angles into mrad for optics and aiming calculations.

What formula does the Degrees to Milliradians calculator use?

Milliradians = degrees × π / 180 × 1000.

What inputs are valid?

Any finite degree value is valid.

When would I use this?

converting degree-based angles into mrad for optics and aiming calculations

Methodology and Review

This page combines a live calculator, precomputed reference values, and FAQ content from the same conversion definition to reduce mismatch between calculator output and lookup tables.

Editorial metadata (author, reviewer, and update date) is rendered on the page and in structured data. See our editorial policy, review process, and corrections policy.

For compliance-sensitive work, verify final values against project requirements, governing standards, and manufacturer documentation.