Almost everything you see in the sky appears to rotate 360 degrees, all the way around the
celestial pole, in a day. That's because the earth is rotating us 360 degrees every day.
Small exceptions are:
Stars and outer planets . . . 361 degrees in 24 hours
The moon . . . . . 348 degrees in 24 hours
Clicking "Rotate Right" on the Drawing toolbar typically rotates an image by 15 degrees each time. Therefore, if you click it twice, the image will rotate a total of 30 degrees to the right.
A star at the celestial equator will move 15 degrees in altitude per hour, and 15 arcseconds in 1 second of time. This is because the celestial equator intersects the celestial sphere at 90 degrees from the north and south celestial poles, so the stars appear to move in circles around the celestial poles.
90 degrees.
abot 500 degrees.
If by "world" you mean planet Earth: it rotates a tiny bit less than one rotation (or 360 degrees) every day.
Clicking "Rotate Right" on the Drawing toolbar typically rotates an image by 15 degrees each time. Therefore, if you click it twice, the image will rotate a total of 30 degrees to the right.
need more context...
Is this question asking "how many degrees does the planet rotate in one hour?" In one day (24 hours), the planet makes a full rotation of 360 degrees. So each hour it would rotate 360/24 = 15 degrees.
15 degrees
It rotates 90 degrees.
9 degrees
180 degrees
360
15
To create a 12-pointed star, the spider must rotate 30 degrees for each point. This is calculated by dividing 360 degrees (a full circle) by 12 points, resulting in 30 degrees of rotation for each segment the spider makes. Therefore, to complete the star, the spider would make a total of 12 rotations of 30 degrees, effectively creating the desired shape.
15
Forty five degrees.