To convert degrees to radians, divide the number of degrees by 180, and multiply the result by pi.
On Earth, about 160 degrees F.
Divide that by 60 to get degrees. If you want degrees and minutes, do an integer division by 60; the remainder will be the minutes. Seconds will of course be zero in this case.
well, its easy, just divide 360 degrees by the amount of corners in this case, 6, 360 divided by 6 is...60 --- 60 degrees
There are 360 degrees in a whole circle. Divide into 12 equal sections and you have got 30 degrees in each.
360 i think im 99.99% im right
360
im thinking earth has about 4,000 parallels on it just kidding i need help with the same problem
Degrees of latitude run east and west around the globe. They are also called parallels of latitude.
Earth's parallel lines are known as latitude lines, which are evenly spaced at intervals of about 69 miles apart. This means that each degree of latitude represents a distance of approximately 69 miles.
there are 181 parallels.
15 degrees north, 30 degrees north, 45 degrees north, 60 degrees north, 75 degrees north, 90 degrees north. ( The last person had put here 180 degrees north. If you look at many other info online, you will find it's actually 90 degrees north, not 180. Also, if you relate beginner geometry and the shape of angles....the equator, horizontal line, straight up to the north pole, is a 90 degree angle. hence the 90 degrees north parallel.)
Every 15 degrees represent one hour. There are 360 degrees around the Earth. Divide 360 by 15 and you 24 - the number of hours in a day, and the time it takes the Earth to rotate on its axis.
There are 360 meridians in the world, as they are lines of longitude that divide the Earth into 360 degrees from the Prime Meridian at Greenwich, England.
Latitude refers to the angular distance of a location north or south of the equator, measured in degrees. Parallels are lines of latitude that run parallel to the equator. Longitude refers to the angular distance of a location east or west of the Prime Meridian, measured in degrees. Meridians are lines of longitude that converge at the poles.
23.5 degrees.
23.5 degrees.