180 degrees divided by pi, or roughly 57.3 degrees.
There are 72 degrees in 1/5th of a circle. This can be found by calculating 360 degrees divided by 5.
360 Divided By How Many Sides The Shape Turned.
6
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 of longatude
89
Four or two
A globe typically shows the Earth's surface in a spherical form, so it consists of 360 degrees of longitude and 180 degrees of latitude, totaling 64,800 square degrees.
Longitudinal lines themselves are imaginary constructs, having no real width, and therefore, no angle to measure. The angle between longitudinal lines on a globe depend on how many longitudinal lines are used to encircle the globe. Assuming that all longitudinal lines are equidistant, the angle can be found by dividing 360 degrees by the number of longitudinal lines. Typically, a globe will be given 36 lines of longitude, so the angle between longitudinal lines is equal to 360 degrees divided by 36 lines, or 10 degrees.
depends on the globe you look at
There are 90 degrees of latitude in each half of the globe.
360 Degrees
360 degrees
Two meridians can be separated by many degrees or by small fractions of a degree.
180 degrees divided by pi, or roughly 57.3 degrees.
The Earth is divided into 24 time zones, with each time zone roughly covering 15 degrees of longitude. This system allows for standardized timekeeping across the globe based on the prime meridian in Greenwich, England.