The separation is 15 degrees.
The hour hand would be at 195 degrees and the minute hand at 180 degrees.
In a clock with 12 hour readings, at 6:30 am the minute hand would be directly on 6 and the hour hand would be mid way between 6 and 7. Between any two markings on this clock the angle is 360/12 = 30 degrees. Since minute hand is precisely on 6 and hour hand is exactly half way between 6 and 7, the angle between them at 6:30 am is 30/2 = 15 degrees
Impossible to answer definitely: whole-number dimensions could vary from 1 x 630 to 21 x 30 factors of 630: 2 x 3 x 3 x 5 x 7
4.05 acres.
5 ft by 9 ft by 14 ft.
15 degrees. Minute hand is pointing to the 6 and the hour hand halfway between 6 and 7, which themselves are 30 deg apart.
It is 15 degrees.
15 degrees, each number is separated by 30 degrees (360/12) so if it's a standard wall clock the hour hand will be halfway between 6 and 7 and the minute hand will be pointed at 6, therefore the angle created is half that between the numbers i.e. 15 degrees.
The hour hand would be at 195 degrees and the minute hand at 180 degrees.
In a clock with 12 hour readings, at 6:30 am the minute hand would be directly on 6 and the hour hand would be mid way between 6 and 7. Between any two markings on this clock the angle is 360/12 = 30 degrees. Since minute hand is precisely on 6 and hour hand is exactly half way between 6 and 7, the angle between them at 6:30 am is 30/2 = 15 degrees
610-630
At 6:00, the hands are 180° apart. In the thirty minutes it takes the minute hand to reach the six, the hour hand will have advanced 15° from the six because it moves at a rate of ½° each minute.
630 or -630
At 6:00, the hands are 180° apart. In the thirty minutes it takes the minute hand to reach the six, the hour hand will have advanced 15° from the six because it moves at a rate of ½° each minute.
At 6:00, the hands are 180° apart. In the thirty minutes it takes the minute hand to reach the six, the hour hand will have advanced 15° from the six because it moves at a rate of ½° each minute.
Yes, it is Between is almost always a preposition, and here it is followed by clock times rather than "dusk and dawn" or other words, so they provide an object.
You have to gently lever out the clock (use a spoon) and the adjustment is on the reverse