There are 10 degrees in 36,000 arcseconds. There are 3600 arcseconds in a degree, and 36,000 divided by 3,600 is 10.
If you mean 1/3 of a circle, there are 1/3 of 360 = 120 degrees. If you mean 1/3 of a quarter turn, it is 1/3 x 90 = 30 degrees.
There are 36 degrees in an hour because 3 multiplied by 12 is 36.
18.4349
It has 3 equal interior angles each measuring 60 degrees and they add up to 180 degrees
5 degrees is 18,000 arcseconds.
There are 10 degrees in 36,000 arcseconds. There are 3600 arcseconds in a degree, and 36,000 divided by 3,600 is 10.
It is impossible to convert arcseconds into metres without knowing the scale of angle measurement.
3600 seconds.
4*60*60 = 144004*60*60 = 144004*60*60 = 144004*60*60 = 14400
A star at the celestial equator will move 15 degrees in altitude per hour, and 15 arcseconds in 1 second of time. This is because the celestial equator intersects the celestial sphere at 90 degrees from the north and south celestial poles, so the stars appear to move in circles around the celestial poles.
1 minute = 60 seconds1 degree = 60 minutes = (60 x 60) = 3,600secondsAn arcsecond is simply a second in terms of degrees. There are 60 arcseconds in one arcminute, and 60 arcminutes in one degree. Therefore, there are 3,600 arcseconds in one degree. This is determined by multiplying 60 by 60, and this equals 3,600.
More solar radiation reaches Jupiter than any other object, because it occupies more of the sun's "field of vision" than any other object. In other words, as seen from the sun, Jupiter "looks biggest," as a near-circle whose average diameter spans an angle of 37 arcseconds.Here is a list of the planets in order by average apparent size as seen from the sun:Jupiter (37.04 arcseconds)Venus (23.07 arcseconds)Earth (17.57 arcseconds)Mercury (17.38 arcseconds)Saturn (17.34 arcseconds)Mars (6.13 arcseconds)Uranus (3.67 arcseconds)Neptune (2.27 arcseconds)
+3 degrees C = +37.4 degrees F.
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.
1080 degrees are in 3 circles. :)
3 degrees Celsius = 37.4 degrees Fahrenheit