Real Part from Magnitude and Phase (Degrees): 50 Magnitude Magnitude; -150 deg Phase Angle (Degrees)

Specific conversion page with reference context, calculator, and nearby values.

Author

Dr. Amara Osei

Math editorial contributor

Ghanaian computational linguist with a PhD from MIT, specializing in NLP for low-resource African languages

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. Value details
  2. Calculator
  3. Nearby reference values
  4. FAQs
  5. Methodology and review
  6. Navigation and related conversions

50 Magnitude Magnitude; -150 deg Phase Angle (Degrees) converts to

-43.30127 Real Part

Use this as a quick reference for Real Part from Magnitude and Phase (Degrees).

Value Details

Input: 50 Magnitude Magnitude; -150 deg Phase Angle (Degrees)

Output: -43.30127 Real Part

Browse all reference values for Real Part from Magnitude and Phase (Degrees)

Real Part from Magnitude and Phase (Degrees)

Calculate the real component of a complex number from magnitude and phase angle in degrees.

Calculated Result

Nearby Reference Values

Real Part from Magnitude and Phase (Degrees) values near 50 Magnitude Magnitude; -150 deg Phase Angle (Degrees)
ScenarioReal Part
20 Magnitude Magnitude; -30 deg Phase Angle (Degrees)17.320508 Real Part
20 Magnitude Magnitude; 0 deg Phase Angle (Degrees)20 Real Part
20 Magnitude Magnitude; 30 deg Phase Angle (Degrees)17.320508 Real Part
20 Magnitude Magnitude; 45 deg Phase Angle (Degrees)14.142136 Real Part
20 Magnitude Magnitude; 60 deg Phase Angle (Degrees)10 Real Part
20 Magnitude Magnitude; 90 deg Phase Angle (Degrees)0 Real Part
20 Magnitude Magnitude; 120 deg Phase Angle (Degrees)-10 Real Part
20 Magnitude Magnitude; 150 deg Phase Angle (Degrees)-17.320508 Real Part
20 Magnitude Magnitude; 180 deg Phase Angle (Degrees)-20 Real Part
50 Magnitude Magnitude; -180 deg Phase Angle (Degrees)-50 Real Part
50 Magnitude Magnitude; -150 deg Phase Angle (Degrees)-43.30127 Real Part
50 Magnitude Magnitude; -120 deg Phase Angle (Degrees)-25 Real Part
50 Magnitude Magnitude; -90 deg Phase Angle (Degrees)0 Real Part
50 Magnitude Magnitude; -60 deg Phase Angle (Degrees)25 Real Part
50 Magnitude Magnitude; -45 deg Phase Angle (Degrees)35.355339 Real Part
50 Magnitude Magnitude; -30 deg Phase Angle (Degrees)43.30127 Real Part
50 Magnitude Magnitude; 0 deg Phase Angle (Degrees)50 Real Part
50 Magnitude Magnitude; 30 deg Phase Angle (Degrees)43.30127 Real Part
50 Magnitude Magnitude; 45 deg Phase Angle (Degrees)35.355339 Real Part
50 Magnitude Magnitude; 60 deg Phase Angle (Degrees)25 Real Part
50 Magnitude Magnitude; 90 deg Phase Angle (Degrees)0 Real Part

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about Real Part from Magnitude and Phase (Degrees), formulas, and expected usage.

What does the Real Part from Magnitude and Phase (Degrees) calculator do?

It helps with converting polar complex form into rectangular real component.

What formula does the Real Part from Magnitude and Phase (Degrees) calculator use?

Real part = magnitude × cos(phase angle in degrees).

What inputs are valid?

Magnitude must be non-negative; phase angle can be any finite degree value.

When would I use this?

converting polar complex form into rectangular real component

Methodology and Review

This page is generated from the same conversion definition used by the main calculator page, which keeps the calculator, reference table rows, and FAQ schema aligned.

Reviewer and update metadata are shown above and included in structured data. See our editorial policy, review process, and corrections policy.

Use this page as a fast lookup reference, then confirm final project values using applicable standards and manufacturer documentation.