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 equivalent to one sixtieth (1/60) of one arc-minute. An arc-minute is equivalent to one sixtieth (1/60) of one 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
minute. Minute is part of and hour. Second is part of a minute.
Radian: 1.21Degrees: 69.3Minutes: 4,158Seconds: 249,500