If the ray is incident at right angles to the reflection surface, angle of Incidence will be 90 degrees and so will be the angle of reflection. In such a case, the incident ray, the normal and the reflected ray coincide.
Since the angle of incidence is equal to the angle of reflection, it is also 15 degrees.
There are fifteen (15) degrees of longitude per time zone. (15 degrees x 24 zones = 360 degrees around the planet)
South America is at 15 degrees south and 45 degrees west.
The continent that is 15 degrees south and 45 degrees west is South America.
(-15) degrees Fahrenheit = -26.11 degrees Celsius[°C] = ([°F] − 32) × 5⁄9
which city is located at 36 degrees north and 15 degrees east
The angle of incidence is ALWAYS equal to the angle of reflection, therefore the degree of the angle reflection is 55 degrees.
The angle of incidence equals the angle of reflection. Therefore, if your angle of incidence is 15 degrees, your angle of reflection equals that also. If it is 45 degrees, your angle of reflection is also 45 degrees, and so on.
An acute angle is 90 degrees and less . so an acute can be 15 degrees
The complementary angle is 15 degrees. Complementary angles sum to 90 degrees, and 90 - 75 = 15.
It is: 15 degrees
82 degrees (180 degrees in a triangle)
The supplementary angle of 57 degrees is 123 degrees The complementary angle of 75 degrees is 15 degrees So: 123 minus 15 = 108 degrees
Between 15 and 20 degrees...
An angle of 165 degrees is an obtuse angle because it is greater than 90 but less than 180 degrees.
The complementary angle is 15 degrees.
It is a right angle triangle and angle A measures 15 degrees.
No. An obtuse angle has a measure of between 90 and 180 degrees.