Say you start at 12 o'clock.
If the minute hand goes around the clock once in a complete circle, it turns to 1 o'clock.
thus, the hour hand makes it a 30 degree angle.
The minute hand of a clock completes a full rotation of 360 degrees in 60 minutes. Therefore, in 35 minutes, the minute hand would have turned (35/60) * 360 degrees, which is 210 degrees.
The minute hand passes through 360 degrees in an hour and 6 degrees in a minute
144 degrees. Each minute mark around the clock face is 6 degrees.
90 degrees
90 Degrees.
The minute hand of a clock completes a full rotation of 360 degrees in 60 minutes. Therefore, in 35 minutes, the minute hand would have turned (35/60) * 360 degrees, which is 210 degrees.
The minute hand passes through 360 degrees in an hour and 6 degrees in a minute
The minute hand of a clock turns about 360 degrees each hour.
1 revolution = 360 degrees 1 revolution = 60 seconds 60 seconds = 360 degrees 60/60 = 1 360/60 = 6 1 second = 6 degrees.
6 degrees.
90 degrees
144 degrees. Each minute mark around the clock face is 6 degrees.
It is 90 degrees
90 Degrees.
90 degrees
-- The angular velocity isone revolution/minute = 360 degrees/minute = 6 degrees/second .(2 pi) radians/minute = pi/30 radians per second . -- If the clock is working properly ... not starting, stopping, speeding up, orslowing down ... then the angular acceleration of any of its hands is zero.
There are 360 degrees on the clock face that the minute hand travels in one hour which is 6 x 10 minutes. So the degrees turned by the minute hand in 10 minutes is 360/6 = 60