On a non-military clock (civil, 12-hour) . . .
-- The hour-hand is moving 360 degrees in 12 hours = 30 degrees per hour.
3:20 is 31/3 hours past noon, so the hour-hand has moved 10/3 x 30 = 100 degrees.
-- The minute-hand is moving 360 degrees per hour. So it starts at zero at the
beginning of each hour, and after 1/3 of the hour, it has moved 360/3 = 120 degrees.
-- The angle between them at 3:20 is [ 120 - 100 ] = 20 degrees.
Each minute space occupies 6 degrees and so 24*6 = 144 degrees or try using a protractor for a more accurate measurement
60 degrees
twice if you're looking for exact right angles
What is this "this" you are talking about? The word "this" is not an angle, it's a word, a demonstrative determinative, to be exact.
The measure of a straight angle is 180 degrees, and the measure of an acute angle is less than 90 degrees. Therefore, the sum of a straight angle and an acute angle will always be greater than the measure of two obtuse angles, as the sum of two obtuse angles will always be greater than 180 degrees. In mathematical terms, 180 + x > 180 + 2y, where x is the acute angle and y is the measure of an obtuse angle.
Each minute space occupies 6 degrees and so 24*6 = 144 degrees or try using a protractor for a more accurate measurement
An obtuse angle. A right angle has an exact measure of 90 degrees; an obtuse angle has a measure greater than 90 degrees.
60 degrees
twice if you're looking for exact right angles
An acute angle is any angle that is between 0° and 90°.At the exact hour mark, the minute hand is always at the 12.And so, the hours where the clock form an acute angle are:1 o'clock2 o'clock10 o'clock11 o'clockThus, there are 4 hours.
What is this "this" you are talking about? The word "this" is not an angle, it's a word, a demonstrative determinative, to be exact.
an acute angle doesn't have an exact measurement, but it is lower than 90 degrees. So any angle below 90 degrees is an acute.
The measure of a straight angle is 180 degrees, and the measure of an acute angle is less than 90 degrees. Therefore, the sum of a straight angle and an acute angle will always be greater than the measure of two obtuse angles, as the sum of two obtuse angles will always be greater than 180 degrees. In mathematical terms, 180 + x > 180 + 2y, where x is the acute angle and y is the measure of an obtuse angle.
An angle plus an equal angle would be equal the first angle multiplied by 2, it cannot be equal to any exact measurement because angle measures are like numbers, they can go up to infinity, and down to negative infinity. The only thing I can tell you about the new angle is that it will be an even numbered angle.
circles don't have an exact angle and there are 360 degrees in a circle
Haha, they couldn't have know the exact time... because before the clock... there was no time :p
I don't know the exact amount when it starts, but I just tried it with 1 trillion sides and each angle was 180. So we know it starts between 1 billion and 1 trillion sides.