1 full turn = 360 degrees
1/6 full turn = 360/6 = 60 degrees
no because 360 degrees is a full circle
Not sure about the artitic (sic) circle but in 2012 the Arctic Circle was approx 66.56 degrees north of the equator. It is around 66.66 degrees north but the exact value depends on the tilt of the Earth's axis which changes slightly over time.
pi/12 = (pi/12)/(2pi) = 1/24 of a circle ( = 15 degrees).
pi over three is 60 degrees.
YES. A small circle is simply a circle around the earth that does not fly over the direct opposite place on earth that a plane took off from. A great circle goes full circumference of earth, where a small circle does not. Being a circle they both fly in a constant direction.
no because 360 degrees is a full circle
Every circle by definition has 360 degrees. If it did not have 360 degrees, it would not be a circle. Therefore, 16 degrees of a circle is 16o over 360o.
A little over one and a half degrees
Pi over 12 on a radian unit circle is a little more than a quarter of the circle. Radian units are an alternative to degrees.
Not sure about the artitic (sic) circle but in 2012 the Arctic Circle was approx 66.56 degrees north of the equator. It is around 66.66 degrees north but the exact value depends on the tilt of the Earth's axis which changes slightly over time.
pi/12 = (pi/12)/(2pi) = 1/24 of a circle ( = 15 degrees).
360 degrees is a full turn and as an improper fraction it is 360/1 degrees
over 90 degrees
pi over three is 60 degrees.
Yes, even above the arctic circle, it can get over 90 degrees F in the summer.
12 minutes is 1/5th of an hour. The minute hand sweeps 360 degrees - a full circle - in one hour. So the angle formed by the start and stop of a 12-minute sweep of the minute hand would be 1/5th of 360 degrees or 72 degrees.
if it is over 90 degrees its obtuse.