60 minutes per hour. Ah, more like 360° per hour.
Angular speed is angle covered by time taken ... in 60 min the angle covered by minute hand is 360. in 5 min it will be 360/60x 5 it will be 30 degrees or pie/6 time taken is 5 minutes Angular velocity --- pie/6x5 pie/30
Two pie over 60 Radian per Minute.
'RPM' is one of many units that can be used to describe angular speed. Angular speed is (any unit of angle) divided by (any unit of time). That's exactly what you have in the unit 'RPM'. 'RPM' means "revolutions per minute". "Revolution" is a unit of angle ... it's exactly 360 degrees ... and "minute" is a unit of time. So RPM is a perfectly fine unit for measuring/describing angular speed.
-- 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.
Angular velocity is a vector with a direction and angular speed is a scalar with no direction.
That motion is called angular motion. The angular speed of the second hand is 2pi radians per minute.
Angular speed = 2*pi radians per 60 seconds = pi/30 radians per second.
The angular speed is 480 degrees per second.
Angular speed is angle covered by time taken ... in 60 min the angle covered by minute hand is 360. in 5 min it will be 360/60x 5 it will be 30 degrees or pie/6 time taken is 5 minutes Angular velocity --- pie/6x5 pie/30
Two pie over 60 Radian per Minute.
The hands of a clock move at a constant speed, not slowing or speeding up. Therefore, the acceleration is a constant 0 rad/s2
6 degrees/second
150radians/sec
The distance depends on how far the relevant point on the minute hand is from its point of rotation. This is because the motion of the minute hand is angular, not linear.
In revolutions per minute (rpm), or radians per second.
'RPM' is one of many units that can be used to describe angular speed. Angular speed is (any unit of angle) divided by (any unit of time). That's exactly what you have in the unit 'RPM'. 'RPM' means "revolutions per minute". "Revolution" is a unit of angle ... it's exactly 360 degrees ... and "minute" is a unit of time. So RPM is a perfectly fine unit for measuring/describing angular speed.
what is the relation angular speed and angular speed with clutch disc plate