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The side and the radius of a regular hexagon are congruent therefore 6 times 12 is 72. The reason the radius and side are the same is that the radius bisects the angle and it is 120. 60 degree angles are part of an equilateral triangle.
9in
There are 60 minutes of angle in one degree of angle.
1 degree = 60 minutes 1 minute = 60 seconds 1 degree = 3,600 seconds
Perpindicular lines are like the lines in the letter "T". The intersect each other at a 90 degree angle. A radius is the distance from the center of the circle to the circle itself. It is half the circle's diameter.
60 degree reflex? Possibly you mean 300 degrees...
60-Degree Angles in an Equilateral Triangle
The side and the radius of a regular hexagon are congruent therefore 6 times 12 is 72. The reason the radius and side are the same is that the radius bisects the angle and it is 120. 60 degree angles are part of an equilateral triangle.
The radius of the Moon's orbit is about 60 times larger than the radius of Earth.
7
What's a "60 foot circle" ? Does that mean the diameter is 60-ft ?Area of a circle = (pi) (radius)2 .Radius = 1/2 diameterIf the diameter is 60-ft, then area = (pi) (30)2 = (900 pi) = 2,827.43 square feet (rounded)
The radius of a circle is half of its diameter. Therefore, if the diameter of the circle is 60 inches, the radius would be half of 60, which is 30 inches. The formula to find the radius from the diameter is: radius = diameter / 2.
radius = 60/2 = 30mm
Since diameter is twice its radius, the radius of this circle would be 60
yes
1 degree = 60 minutes1 minute = 60 secondsThus, a degree has 3600 seconds.1 degree = 60 minutes1 minute = 60 secondsThus, a degree has 3600 seconds.1 degree = 60 minutes1 minute = 60 secondsThus, a degree has 3600 seconds.1 degree = 60 minutes1 minute = 60 secondsThus, a degree has 3600 seconds.
1 minute = 60 seconds1 degree = 60 minutes = (60 x 60) = 3,600secondsAn arcsecond is simply a second in terms of degrees. There are 60 arcseconds in one arcminute, and 60 arcminutes in one degree. Therefore, there are 3,600 arcseconds in one degree. This is determined by multiplying 60 by 60, and this equals 3,600.