yes
Sure. That just means that when you set up the problem, you indicated angles to be measured in a certain direction from the reference point, and the answer turned out to be an angle in the other direction from the reference.
If you are talking about angles, a second is one sixtieth of a minute. A minute is one sixtieth of a degree. Soooo, a second is one 3600th of a degree (60 times 60)
An arc second is 1/60th of an arc minute and 1/3600th of a degree. This means there are 60 arc seconds in an arc minute, and 3600 arc seconds in a degree.
there are 60 seconds in one minute. An arc minute is 1/60 degree and an arc second is 1/3600 degree
Angles! A minute is 1/60 of a degree; a second is 1/60 of a minute.
60° 43' 48"
1 per minute.
1 second = 1/60 of a minute = 0.0166666 (repeating) minutes
Longitude and latitude are given in degrees, each degree is 60 minutes, each minute is 60 seconds.A coordinate might be written similar to 65° 32' 15" (degree °, minute ', second ").
1 degree = 1/360th of a full circle1 minute = 1/60th of a degree = 1/216,000th of a full circle1 second = 1/60th of a minute = 1/3,600th of a degree = 1/1,296,000th of a full circle
Yes, it is possible for the percent difference to be negative when comparing two values. This occurs when the second value is greater than the first value, resulting in a negative percentage difference.
Radian: 1.21Degrees: 69.3Minutes: 4,158Seconds: 249,500