A
chord of a
circle is a line segment whose endpoints are on the circle. Ptolemy used a circle whose diameter is 120 parts. He tabulated the length of a chord whose endpoints are separated by an arc of
n degrees, for
n ranging from to 180 by increments of . In modern notation, the length of the chord corresponding to an arc of
θ degrees is : \begin{align} & \operatorname{chord}(\theta) = 120\sin\left(\frac{\theta^\circ} 2 \right) \\ = {} & 60 \cdot \left( 2 \sin\left(\frac{\pi\theta}{360} \text{ radians} \right) \right). \end{align} As
θ goes from 0 to 180, the chord of a
θ° arc goes from 0 to 120. For tiny arcs, the chord is to the arc angle in degrees as is to 3, or more precisely, the ratio can be made as close as desired to ≈ by making
θ small enough. Thus, for the arc of , the chord length is slightly more than the arc angle in degrees. As the arc increases, the ratio of the chord to the arc decreases. When the arc reaches , the chord length is exactly equal to the number of degrees in the arc, i.e. chord 60° = 60. For arcs of more than 60°, the chord is less than the arc, until an arc of 180° is reached, when the chord is only 120. The fractional parts of chord lengths were expressed in
sexagesimal (base 60) numerals. For example, where the length of a chord subtended by a 112° arc is reported to be 99,29,5, it has a length of : 99 + \frac{29}{60} + \frac{5}{60^2} = 99.4847\overline{2}, rounded to the nearest . : \begin{array} \hline \text{arc}^\circ & \text{chord} & & & \text{sixtieths} & & \\ \hline {}\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\, \tfrac12 & 0 & 31 & 25 & 0 \quad 1 & 2 & 50 \\ {}\,\,\,\,\,\,\, 1 & 1 & 2 & 50 & 0 \quad 1 & 2 & 50 \\ {}\,\,\,\,\,\,\, 1\tfrac12 & 1 & 34 & 15 & 0 \quad 1 & 2 & 50 \\ {}\,\,\,\,\,\,\, \vdots & \vdots & \vdots & \vdots & \vdots & \vdots & \vdots \\ 109 & 97 & 41 & 38 & 0 \quad 0 & 36 & 23 \\ 109\tfrac12 & 97 & 59 & 49 & 0 \quad 0 & 36 & 9 \\ 110 & 98 & 17 & 54 & 0 \quad 0 & 35 & 56 \\ 110\tfrac12 & 98 & 35 & 52 & 0 \quad 0 & 35 & 42\\ 111 & 98 & 53 & 43 & 0 \quad 0 & 35 & 29 \\ 111\tfrac12 & 99 & 11 & 27 & 0 \quad 0 & 35 & 15 \\ 112 & 99 & 29 & 5 & 0 \quad 0 & 35 & 1\\ 112\tfrac12 & 99 & 46 & 35 & 0 \quad 0 & 34 & 48 \\ 113 & 100 & 3 & 59 & 0 \quad 0 & 34 & 34 \\ {}\,\,\,\,\,\,\, \vdots & \vdots & \vdots & \vdots & \vdots & \vdots & \vdots \\ 179 & 119 & 59 & 44 & 0 \quad 0 & 0 & 25 \\ 179\frac12 & 119 & 59 & 56 & 0 \quad 0 & 0 & 9 \\ 180 & 120 & 0 & 0 & 0 \quad 0 & 0 & 0 \\ \hline \end{array} == How Ptolemy computed chords ==