An acute angle is any angle that is between 0° and 90°.
At the exact hour mark, the minute hand is always at the 12.
And so, the hours where the clock form an acute angle are:
1 o'clock
2 o'clock
10 o'clock
11 o'clock
Thus, there are 4 hours.
At 3 hours 45 minutes there is not an acute angle between the hands of the clock (unless you extend the hands backwards).
The hands of the clock form an obtuse angle during each and every hour.
Angle between the hands of a clock=|11M-60H|/2i.e. M-Minutes=35(here)H- Hours=7(here)∴ The angle b/w hands of a clock=|11*35-60*7|/2=17.5°
Right Angle or 900
The angle - is 120 degrees !
90 degrees and 270 degrees.
Technically 364.999 to the Nth degree, since the hands of a clock go in circles, you could view them barely touching as an obtuse angle.
It creates a 150o angle at 3:40
The duration of No Hands on the Clock is 1.27 hours.
At 3:00 (1500 hours) on a clock, the hour hand is pointing directly at the 3 and the minute hand is pointing at the 12. To find the angle between the hands, we can use the formula: |(30*H) - ((11/2)M)|, where H is the hour and M is the minute. Plugging in the values, we get |(303) - ((11/2)*0)| = |90 - 0| = 90 degrees. Therefore, the angle between the hands of the clock at 1500 hours is 90 degrees.
44 times in 24 hours.(Considering the hour- and minute-hands only.)
Assuming you mean the angle of the hands of a clock set at 11. the smaller angle would be 30 degrees, and the larger would be 330 degrees.