At 70 degrees from the vertical.
To convert meters to degrees, you need to consider the context, as meters measure distance while degrees measure angles. If you're dealing with a spherical surface, such as the Earth, you can use the formula: degrees = (meters / (π * radius)) * 180, where the radius is the radius of the sphere in meters. For the Earth, the average radius is about 6,371 kilometers. Thus, you would convert that radius to meters and apply the formula accordingly.
The temperature 2 meters under the Earth's surface varies depending on location, but generally, it can be estimated to increase by about 25-30 degrees Fahrenheit for every kilometer in depth due to the geothermal gradient. Therefore, it would be slightly warmer than the surface temperature.
Degrees celsius can't be converted to meters. Degrees celsius measure temperature, while meters measure length.
35 yards = 32 meters.
it is possible!!Degrees, Minutes and Seconds to Distance A degree of longitude at the equator is 111.2 kilometers. A minute is 1853 meters. A second is 30.9 meters. For other latitudes multiply by cos(lat). Distances for degrees, minutes and seconds in latitude are very similar and differ very slightly with latitude. (Before satellites, observing those differences was a principal method for determining the exact shape of the earth.)for more details, fallow this link i found!http://www.uwgb.edu/dutchs/UsefulData/UTMFormulas.htm#Spreadsheet
A cylinder with a radius of 6 meters and a height of 10.5 meters has a surface area of 622.04m2
A cylinder that has a diameter of 10 meters and a height of 3 meters has a surface area of 251.33m2
A cylinder with a height of 10 meters and diameter of 4 meters has a surface area of 150.8m2
A cylinder with a height of 20 meters and a diameter of 10 meters has a surface area of 785.4m2
The surface area of the pond is measured in square meters.
The side adjacent to the forty degrees of a right triangle with a hypotenuse of 6 meters and one of its angles measuring forty degrees is: 4.6 meters.
The circumference of that cylinder would be 31.4156 meters, and with a height of 4 meters, the outside surface of the sides would be 125.66 square meters. Does a cylinder have both an inside and outside surface? There is no thickness at all to the sides. Maybe it needs to be doubled, to be 251.32 square meters so we get both inside and outside surface, but I think not. A cylindrical *prism* would have a top and bottom, each having a surface of 78.54 square meters, for a total of 282.74 square meters.