Horizontal is an angle. Angles are reference measurements to another line or plane.
i dont no.
If a shell is fired from the ground with velocity of 1600 m and an angle of 64 to the horizontal then it would have a horizontal rang of 55.0. This is considered math.
True
The angle of reflection is equal to the angle of incidence. In the "diagram" below the line pointing up is perpendicular to the horizontal line. The horizontal line is something like a mirror. | | ____________|_________ Now if a light wave was to hit the mirror where the two lines cross then the angle of incidence is the angle between the light wave and the perpendicular line. The angle of reflection will be the same angle only in the opposite rotation to the perpendicular
Can't say. It depends on the release velocity (muzzle velocity).The maximum horizontal distance always results from an angle of 45 degrees, regardless of the release velocity.
this is horizontal: ---------------------------- / / this is at an angle: / / /
A horizontal angle is an angle between lines on a horizontal plane.
The angle formed by a horizontal line is 180o.
horizontal lines are lines which may be at the angle of 00,1800,3600.if vertical lines stand on horizontal lines it is in the angle of 900
The angle of inclination.
Angle of depression is the angle between a horizontal line and the line joining the observer's eye to some object beneath the horizontal line. ^_^
horizontal?
angle of depression.
they don't they are only pictured like that because it is hard to picture them all on a different plane.
A vertical angle runs up and down or from top to bottom or vise versa. A horizontal angle runs from left to right or vice versa.
i dont no.
Start by drawing a horizontal line. Next place a dot near the middle of it where you want the vertex. Then draw a 20° angle upward and to the right using your dot as the vertex, and the horizontal line as one leg of your angle. You can then erase (if you want) the horizontal line that forms one side of your 20° angle Your 200° angle then extends from the horizontal line to the left of the vertex counterclockwise around to the remaining leg of your 20° angle.