One tenth of a full circle is 36 degrees.
5 out of 18 parts is 5/18. Multiply that by 360, since that's the number of degrees in a full circle.
There are 60 arcminutes in one degree. There are 360 degrees in a circle. Therefore, one full rotation is equal to 360 x 60 = 21600 arcminutes.
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.
Perhaps you mean arcsecond. A full circle has 360° (360 degrees); a degree is divided into 60 minutes (or arcminutes), and a minute is divided into 60 seconds (or arcseconds). Multiply everything together to get the amount of seconds in a circle.
40 degrees.
360 degrees are equivalent to a full circle.
there is 360 degrees in a full circle no matter how big or small the circle it is
There are 360 degrees around a full circle
One tenth of a full circle is 36 degrees.
A full turn of a circle contains 360 degrees
360
A full rotation is a 360 degree rotation. A full circle is 360 degrees.
There are 90 degrees in a right angle There are 180 degrees on a straight line There are 360 degrees in a full circle
360
There are 360 degrees in a full revolution. Therefore, 65 percent of a full circle is equal to 0.65 x 360 = 234 degrees.
One eighth of a full circle is equal to 45 degrees. A full circle is 360 degrees, so to find one eighth of that, you divide 360 by 8, which equals 45. This is a fundamental concept in geometry and trigonometry, where understanding angles and their measurements is crucial.