The minute hand will be at 12 and the hour hand will be at 2. Between 2 and 3 o'clock, the minute hand moves faster, so it will reach the 7 position first, while the hour hand will still be approaching the 2 position.
The needle of a clock is referred to as a hand.
Yes, moving a clock's minute hand is a rigid motion because the shape and size of the hand do not change during the movement. The hand rotates around a fixed point (the clock center) without any distortion.
Sometimes, it is called a sweep hand, but the hands on a clock usually are called hour, minute, and second.
The minute hand traces its path around the clock once in an hour. The distance travelled by the tip of the hand in this time is 2 x pi x 5cm.The speed is then 10pi cm/hour, which is 8.73 x 10-5 ms-1.
60 minutes per hour. Ah, more like 360° per hour.
The long hand
It is the long hand.
the second hand
The full circle of the clock is 360 degrees. The distance between any two figures on the clock is therefore 360 ./. 12 = 30 degrees. When it's 6 o'clock there are six figures between the hour hand and the minute hand, so 6 x 30 = 180 degrees.
22
The time period of a nimute hand on the clock is one minute since it takes a minute for it to complete one oscillation, ie., one complete cycle of the clock.
The minute hand of a clock turns about 360 degrees each hour.
Each minute on the clock is 1/60 of the 360 degree circle or 6 degrees. There are 20 minute lines between 12 and 4 therefore, 20 times 6 is 120 degrees.
1200
The minute hand is the largest hand on most analogue clocks. At 3 o'clock on a 12-hour clock, the minute hand is pointing straight up to the 12. It measures time to the nearest minute by advancing one of the small minute hash marks every 60 seconds. Every time the second hand makes one full sweep of the clock face, the minute hand advances one of the minute marks. The second hand is the fastest moving hand on a standard analogue clock, making one full sweep every 60 seconds.
The least count of a clock with an hour hand and a minute hand is typically one minute. This is because the minute hand moves in increments of one minute, allowing for the most precise measurement of time that can be observed directly on the clock face. While the hour hand indicates hours, its movement is less precise for measuring time intervals compared to the minute hand. Thus, the least count is determined by the finer divisions, which are represented by the minute hand.
Hour hand and minute hand.