Well try to think about it logically. The minute hand completes a full circle every hour, so all you need to know is how many hours are in one day.
Hope this helps you.
There are 360 degrees around a circle and if an arc covers 45 degrees of the circle then the fraction is 45/360 or 1/8 in its simplest form
A full rotation of a circle is equal to 360 degrees. Area of a circle is: pi times radius squared.
The Minute hand makes a full circle of the clock's dial every Hour. Since there are 24 hours in a day, then the Minute hand travels 24 full circles every day.
It makes a full circle around the clock. For example, if it was six o'clock, the minute hand would have started at the top, at the 12. It would then make a full circle, until it reaches again, the 12. Then it would be seven o'clock.
1 degree = 1/360th of a full circle1 minute = 1/60th of a degree = 1/216,000th of a full circle1 second = 1/60th of a minute = 1/3,600th of a degree = 1/1,296,000th of a full circle
The hour hand of a clock completes one full circle every 12 hours. Therefore, in a 24-hour day, the hour hand covers a full circle twice. This is because the hour hand completes one full rotation from 12 o'clock to 12 o'clock in the morning and another full rotation from 12 o'clock to 12 o'clock at night.
There are 360 degrees around a circle and if an arc covers 45 degrees of the circle then the fraction is 45/360 or 1/8 in its simplest form
A full circle has 360 degree; each degree has 60 minutes; each minute has 60 seconds. Multiply those three numbers to get the desired answer.
A full rotation of a circle is equal to 360 degrees. Area of a circle is: pi times radius squared.
The Minute hand makes a full circle of the clock's dial every Hour. Since there are 24 hours in a day, then the Minute hand travels 24 full circles every day.
It makes a full circle around the clock. For example, if it was six o'clock, the minute hand would have started at the top, at the 12. It would then make a full circle, until it reaches again, the 12. Then it would be seven o'clock.
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.
Use the information you have to find it. -- divide the length of the arc by the total circumference of the circle, or -- divide the central angle of the arc by 360 degrees (a full circle)
There are 360 degrees in a full circle. 60 minutes in 1 degree 60 seconds in 1 minute Therefore: 360 x 60 x 60 = 1,296,000 seconds
1 degree = 1/360th of a full circle1 minute = 1/60th of a degree = 1/216,000th of a full circle1 second = 1/60th of a minute = 1/3,600th of a degree = 1/1,296,000th of a full circle
The minute hand on a clock moves 360 degrees in a full circle, representing 60 minutes. Therefore, in 10 minutes, the minute hand would move 1/6th of a full circle. To calculate this, you would divide 360 degrees by 60 minutes and then multiply by 10 minutes, resulting in 60 degrees.
RPM stands for revolutions per minute. Its the measurement of how many times the crank shaft makes a full turn in a minute. It can be measured by how many times a cylinder goes up and down in an engine in a minute where one cycle equals a full motion up and down.