Yes, it is.
1 degree is 1/360 of a full turn
To find the half of a fraction, multiply the given fraction by 1/2 or 0.5.
-- If the fractional part of the angle is less than 1/2 degree, just throw away the fraction and forget about it. -- If the fractional part of the angle is 1/2 degree or more, add one to the degrees and throw away the fraction.
Remember that in math, "of" usually means "times". To find a fraction of a fraction, multiply them.
An arc second is a measurement of an angle, so you would need to know how far away the object is. From there, there are two ways to proceed: 1. Use a circle with the distance as the radius a. find the degree fraction (degrees/360; there are 3600 arcseconds in 1 degree) b. find the circumference of the circle and multiply by the degree fraction 2. Set up a triangle and use a trigonometric function.
To find the fraction of a 360 degree circle that is 30 degrees, you would divide the angle measurement by the total angle of the circle. So, 30 degrees divided by 360 degrees equals 1/12. Therefore, 30 degrees is 1/12 of a 360 degree circle.
It is simply the arctan transformation of the fraction.
Yes, it is.
1/8 of a circle
# A numerical fraction in which the numerator is less than the denominator. # A polynomial fraction in which the numerator is of a lower degree than the denominator.
1/360
1/360
It is a quarter of a turn.
Yes, it is.
dont know
1 degree is 1/360 of a full turn