180 degrees
Thirty minutes later (six-thirty) is your answer.
Each minute is six degrees.
0' or 360'
Every minute on a round clock is six degrees. Putting the hands on 12 and 3 (15 minutes) would be a 90 degree angle.
At 6:00, the hands are 180° apart. In the thirty minutes it takes the minute hand to reach the six, the hour hand will have advanced 15° from the six because it moves at a rate of ½° each minute.
Thirty minutes later (six-thirty) is your answer.
Each minute is six degrees.
0' or 360'
Every minute on a round clock is six degrees. Putting the hands on 12 and 3 (15 minutes) would be a 90 degree angle.
At 6:00, the hands are 180° apart. In the thirty minutes it takes the minute hand to reach the six, the hour hand will have advanced 15° from the six because it moves at a rate of ½° each minute.
At 6:00, the hands are 180° apart. In the thirty minutes it takes the minute hand to reach the six, the hour hand will have advanced 15° from the six because it moves at a rate of ½° each minute.
At 6:00, the hands are 180° apart. In the thirty minutes it takes the minute hand to reach the six, the hour hand will have advanced 15° from the six because it moves at a rate of ½° each minute.
It is not backwards when the hands of the clock points towards it.
Eight times in a day the hands of a clock form straight angle. At first they form straight angle when the hour amd minute hand are on 3 and 9 in noon and night. Second, when the hour amd minute hand are on 9 and 3 in morning and night. Third when the hour amd minute hand are on 12 and 6 At last when the hour amd minute hand are on 6 and 12.
To find the angle of a pie chart representing twenty-one out of thirty-six, first calculate the fraction: ( \frac{21}{36} = \frac{7}{12} ). Since a full circle is 360 degrees, multiply this fraction by 360: ( \frac{7}{12} \times 360 = 210 ) degrees. Therefore, the angle in the pie chart that represents twenty-one out of thirty-six is 210 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.
One hundred thirty thousand, six hundred.