3600 times.
11 times in every 12 hours.
It rotates 25*360 = 9000 degrees.
44 times in 24 hours.(Considering the hour- and minute-hands only.)
Each minute on the clock is 1/60 of the 360 degree circle or 6 degrees. There are 20 minute lines between 12 and 4 therefore, 20 times 6 is 120 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.
If we define a day as 24 hours, the minute hand moves around the clock face once an hour. 24 times.
23 times
11 times in every 12 hours.
It rotates 25*360 = 9000 degrees.
44 times in 24 hours.(Considering the hour- and minute-hands only.)
A clock makes a zero degree angle twice a day. This occurs when the hour and minute hands align perfectly, typically at 12:00 (noon) and 12:00 (midnight). At these times, the hands form a straight line, representing a zero degree angle.
Each minute on the clock is 1/60 of the 360 degree circle or 6 degrees. There are 20 minute lines between 12 and 4 therefore, 20 times 6 is 120 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.
44. 22 in each 12 hour cyccle.
72 times
60 times 24 = 1,440
Once