Anticlockwise.
the answer is twice. the angle of rotation is twice the measure
360 degrees
An angle is a measure of turn. the amount of turn is the magnitude, measured in degrees, and direction of turn can be clockwise or anti-clockwise. A positive angle turns in an anti-clockwise direction while a negative angle turns in a clockwise direction.
There can be no equivalence. A kilometre is a measure of linear displacement while a degree [rotation] is a measure of angular displacement. The two measure different things and, according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, any attempt at conversion from one to the other is fundamentally flawed. For any angular rotation, the linear displacement is directly proportional to the distance from the centre of rotation.
A degree is a measure of rotation, a foot is a measure of distance. These two are incomparable.
Clockwise.
There is no synonym to velocity. there is no directionality in velocity. speed is a measure of rotation around a center expressed in revolutions per unit of time. Velocity is a measure of distance in units of time with no direction. Vectors indicate direction.
you can measure ac using a cathode ray oscilloscope. it will project a sinusodial waveform, showing that the current is in the positive direction in the first half and the opposite direction in the second half
An angular frequency is a scalar measure of rate of rotation.
Rainfall and HumidityTemperaturesWind speed and direction
the answer is twice. the angle of rotation is twice the measure
measure the angels of rotation.
Correlation is a statistical technique that is used to measure and describe the strength and direction of the relationship between two variables.
measure the angels of rotation.
360 degrees
An angle is a measure of turn. the amount of turn is the magnitude, measured in degrees, and direction of turn can be clockwise or anti-clockwise. A positive angle turns in an anti-clockwise direction while a negative angle turns in a clockwise direction.
Measure the angle in a plane perpendicular to the axis of rotation, between the position of a fixed point at the start and end of the rotation.