There is no relationship between the two. One is a measure of an angle and the other is a measure of how hot something is (this is not the same as heat). They just happen to have the same name.
The hour hand on a standard 12 hour clock rotates one twelth of 360 degrees in one hour. That is 30 degrees.
The relationship between degrees Celsius (°C) and kelvins (K) is given by the formula: K = °C + 273.15. To convert a temperature from degrees Celsius to kelvins, simply add 273.15 to the Celsius temperature.
1 rotation = 360 degrees 3/4 rotation = 270 degrees
10 degrees
3 degrees, or 50%
No, the resistance of a thermistor is typically measured in ohms. The relationship between the resistance of a thermistor and temperature is nonlinear, and it is used to calculate the temperature of the thermistor in degrees Celsius.
The difference between 13 degrees Celsius and -5 degrees Celsius is calculated by subtracting the smaller temperature from the larger temperature. In this case, the calculation would be 13 - (-5) = 13 + 5 = 18 degrees Celsius. Therefore, the temperature difference between 13 degrees Celsius and -5 degrees Celsius is 18 degrees Celsius.
between 30 degrees and 100 degrees
480 degrees is equivalent to one complete revolution (360 degrees) plus an additional 120 degrees. Minus 60 degrees represents a rotation in the opposite direction, resulting in a counterclockwise rotation of 60 degrees from the starting point.
A full rotation is a 360 degree rotation. A full circle is 360 degrees.
28-(-11)=39 degrees
The warm air moving toward the poles between 30 degrees and 60 degrees latitude in the Northern Hemisphere is known as the Ferrel cell. This movement is part of the general atmospheric circulation patterns driven by the rotation of the Earth and temperature differences between the equator and poles.