5 and a half hours. hell yeah
That frickin' right
One
If a day had 18 hours instead of 24 hours, there would still be 24 time zones around the world. Each time zone would cover 15 degrees of longitude, just like in the current 24-hour system.
Each time zone differs by one hour from the adjacent time zone. This is to account for the Earth's rotation which causes changes in daylight and nighttime across different regions of the world.
there is no time difference between any two locations separated by x-amount of latitude as long as they are on the same longitude. When they are on different longitudes and separated by latitude count the number of longitudes between the locations to get the time difference
The time difference between Australia and Denmark varies depending on the locations within each country. On average, there is a 8-10 hour time difference, with Australia being ahead of Denmark. Time zones and daylight saving time changes can also impact the difference in hours.
In the contiguous United States, there are four time zones. Eastern Standard Time, Central Standard Time, Mountain Standard Time and Pacific Standard Time. Each time zone is separated one hour from the time zones that it borders. In this case, Central Standard Time (CST) is separated from Pacific Standard Time (PST) by the Mountain Standard Time (MST). Therefore the two time zones are two hours apart from each other.
36 hours
One
88 x 24 hours each time round.
There are five watches of four hours each plus two dog watches of two hours each in nautical time for duty.
12.5 hrs
Credits are usually based on the actual number of hours in class. Eighteen hours would be that many hours in the classroom each week. And most say to plan for 2 to 3 hours of study time for each hour in class.
The hours would be earlier to the west of each time zone.
In a three phase power system, each phase is separated from the others by 120 degrees.
two dog watches of two hours each
If a day had 18 hours instead of 24 hours, there would still be 24 time zones around the world. Each time zone would cover 15 degrees of longitude, just like in the current 24-hour system.
each semester is 13 hours considered full time