If we simply imagine the minute hand is on the 6, and the hour hand is on the two, there will be a total of 120 degrees between the minute and the hour hand, 1/3 of the clock is covered between the two hands. However, it is not that simple. Because 30 minutes has travelled, the hour hand will be half way between the 2 and the 3. We know that every hour, the hour hand moves 30 degrees (360 / 12 hours = 30). Therefore, in 30 minutes, it will have travelled 15 degrees. Which means the hour hand is 15 degrees closer to the minute hand. Therefore, the actual angle between the minute and hour hand is actually 105 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
Each interval between numbers on a clock is 30 degrees. When the minute hand is on the 6 (which is the half mark), the hour hand has already moved 15 degrees from 12, because half of 30 is 15. To make calculating the angle easier, we can apply what we know. We know that a straight line is 180 degrees. Now subtract 15 from 180, and you get 165 degrees.
A 140 degree angle is about half way between a 90 degree angle, which has lines that are perpendicular to each other, and a 180 degree angle, which is a straight line. A 140 degree angle is an obtuse angle which has a line a little over half way between the 90 degree and 180 degree angles.
45 degrees is the angle halfway between the floor and the wall of your house.
A bisector is a ray or segment which cuts an angle in half.
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
The angle between the two hands of the clock at half past two is 105 degrees.
180 degrees. The hands are a straight line. Or, to be technical, you divide the clock face (360 degrees) by the number of minutes there are in half a day (clocks only record half a day: AM or PM), which is 360/12*60, so each minute is half a degree. There are 360 minutes between the twelve and the six on a clock. Half of 360 is 180. This only works for times ON THE HOUR, otherwise, the hour hand moves for every minute of time passing.
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.
Each interval between numbers on a clock is 30 degrees. When the minute hand is on the 6 (which is the half mark), the hour hand has already moved 15 degrees from 12, because half of 30 is 15. To make calculating the angle easier, we can apply what we know. We know that a straight line is 180 degrees. Now subtract 15 from 180, and you get 165 degrees.
0 degrees. No -- this is a trick question. At 6:00 the hands are at 180 degrees, but by the time the minute hand has moved to 30 minutes the hour hand has moved on to half way between '6' and '7', so the angle between the hands is 360/24 degrees = 15 degrees.
15 degrees (a 15 degree angle). The minute hand points directly to the 6 (marking an exact half hour); the hour hand is exactly half way between the 6 and 7, marking 6.5 hours exactly. Each full hour (usually marked on clock by a number) represents 30 degrees (1/12 of 360); each half hour represents 1/2 of that or 15 degrees.
Approximately half the time.
Half 3
In college basketball a half takes 20 minutes on the clock. In high school and in the NBA a half is 24 minutes on the clock made up of two 12 minute periods.
The angle between the hour hand and the minute hand on a standard clock at 6:30 is 15 degrees. Let's review the movement of the hands of the clock specific to this problem. The hour hand moves through the 12 hours of half a day in 12 hours (naturally), and that translates into the hour hand moving 360 degrees in 12 hours. That means the hour hand moves 360/12, or 30 degrees per hour. That translates into 15 degrees in half an hour. If the hour hand is pointing straight down at 6:00 (which it is), it will move 15 degrees from where it was in half and hour. And the time will be 6:30 with the minute hand pointing straight down. The minute hand will be pointing to where the hour hand was half an hour ago. And, as stated, the hour hand will have moved from dead on the six and gone 15 degrees further around.
in a half day it occur or happens 22 times