That will depend on the length of the arc but an arc radian of a circle is about 57.3 degrees
It will be 1/3 of the circle's circumference
An arc length of 120 degrees is 1/3 of the circumference of a circle
As long as the arc isnt a full circle, just 1, if it is a circle, infinite.
2pi/9 radians or 40 degrees
There are 360 degrees in a full circle. 60 minutes in 1 degree 60 seconds in 1 minute Therefore: 360 x 60 x 60 = 1,296,000 seconds
The calculation is 60 arc seconds X 60 arc minutes X 360 degrees in a full circle. So, there are 1,296,000 arc seconds in a full circle.
It will be 1/3 of the circle's circumference
35 degrees :)
An arc length of 120 degrees is 1/3 of the circumference of a circle
An arc minute is a unit of angular measurement equal to 1/60th of a degree. Since there are 360 degrees in a full circle, this means there are 21,600 arc minutes in a full circle (360 degrees x 60 arc minutes per degree). Therefore, there are 21.6 thousands in an arc minute.
Degrees are used to measure the arc of a circle. A full circle is 360 degrees, and a half circle 180. so 9 degrees would be 1/40th of a complete circle.
There are 360 degrees around a circle and if an arc covers 45 degrees of the circle then the fraction is 45/360 or 1/8 in its simplest form
The length of an arc measuring 60 degrees given a circle with a radius of 6 is 2*pi, that is 6,2831 approximately.The perimeter of a circle is calculated with the formula:L = 2 * pi * rwhere L is the perimeter and r the radius of the circle. This is equivalent to calculating the length of an arc measuring 360 degrees. The length of any arc smaller than 360 is proportionally smaller. Given that 60 degrees is 1/6 of the total circle (360), the length of the arc will be 1/6 of the perimeter.2 * pi * 6L = --------------- = 2 * pi6
One inch does not directly convert to degrees because they measure different things: inches measure length while degrees measure angles. However, in the context of a circle, there are 360 degrees in a full circle, and if you're considering a circle's circumference, you can use the formula for arc length to relate the two. Specifically, for a circle with a radius, you can calculate how many degrees correspond to a certain arc length (in inches) based on the circle's size.
60/360 = 1/6th of the whole circle
A mathematical arc is any segment of the circumference of a circle. It is normally expressed in degrees, referring to the angle between the two lines drawn from either end of the arc to the center of the circle. Therefore, a 900 arc is 1/4 of the circle's circumference and a 1800 arc is half the circumference.
As long as the arc isnt a full circle, just 1, if it is a circle, infinite.