There are 60 seconds in every minute of longitude so there are 120 seconds in every 2 minutes of longitude.
Greenwich is at 0 Longitude Dublin, Ireland is at 6 degrees 15 minutes 35 seconds West longitude. There for Dublin is 6 degrees 15 minutes 35 seconds west of Greenwich
"Lines of longitude" are conceptual, not physical; there can be as many as we want. For example, there are 3600 "seconds of longitude" between each degree of longitude. That's 60 minutes of arc per degree, and 60 seconds of arc per minute.
For every degree of longitude, is divided into 60 minutes. Each minute is then divided into 60 seconds. Since 1 degree equals 60 nautical miles. Then 1 minute equals 1 nautical mile Then 1 second equals approximately 35 yards across.
There are 60 minutes in a degree and 60 seconds in a minute, so a degree has 3600 seconds. These are arc minutes and seconds, no relation to time measurements. A circle has 360 degrees.
6000 seconds is 0.0694 days, or 1 hour and 40 minutes.
It is 3600 seconds for you have 60 minutes in every degree so there are 60 seconds in every minute.
Latitude and longitude are angles, and are described in the same units as any other angular quantity. 60 seconds = 1 minute 60 minutes = 1 degree 360 degrees = 1 full circle
Greenwich is at 0 Longitude Dublin, Ireland is at 6 degrees 15 minutes 35 seconds West longitude. There for Dublin is 6 degrees 15 minutes 35 seconds west of Greenwich
there is 60 seconds in every minute. 15 minutes is 800 seconds.
"Lines of longitude" are conceptual, not physical; there can be as many as we want. For example, there are 3600 "seconds of longitude" between each degree of longitude. That's 60 minutes of arc per degree, and 60 seconds of arc per minute.
For every degree of longitude, is divided into 60 minutes. Each minute is then divided into 60 seconds. Since 1 degree equals 60 nautical miles. Then 1 minute equals 1 nautical mile Then 1 second equals approximately 35 yards across.
There are 60 seconds in every minute. Therefore to convert from seconds to minutes we must divide by 60. So for 10,000 seconds: 10,000/60 = 166 2/3 minutes.
For precision purposes, degrees of longitude and latitude have been divided into minutes (') and seconds ("). There are 60 minutes in each degree. Each minute is divided into 60 seconds. Seconds can be further divided into tenths, hundredths, or even thousandths.
86, 400 seconds are in one day.
One minute and 13 seconds in 73 seconds. I hope this answer is not copyrighted yet.
6 minutes, 11 seconds
11 minutes, 10 seconds.