6 degrees. There are 360 degrees in a full circle, and therefore for every second the hand moves through one sixtieth of a circle.
6 degrees.
It travels once around the clock per hour. (It rotates 360 degrees.)
240 degrees - 30 degrees for each hour on the clock
Oh, that's a happy little question! Since there are 60 seconds in a minute, and a full circle is 360 degrees, the second hand on a clock moves at 6 degrees per second. Isn't that just a delightful little detail to know? Just imagine that gentle movement bringing peace and tranquility to your day.
360\12= 30o
360
6 degrees.
30 degrees
720, 8,640 and 518,400 degrees respectively.
The minute hand of a clock passes through 30 degrees from 12 o'clock to 1 o'clock because the full circle of a clock is 360 degrees and there are 12 hours on a clock. So, 360 degrees / 12 hours = 30 degrees per hour.
yes
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All the way around the dial would be 360- from 3 to 9 is half that.
1 per minute.
It moves through 360 degrees
The minute hand passes through 360 degrees in an hour and 6 degrees in a minute
-- The angular velocity isone revolution/minute = 360 degrees/minute = 6 degrees/second .(2 pi) radians/minute = pi/30 radians per second . -- If the clock is working properly ... not starting, stopping, speeding up, orslowing down ... then the angular acceleration of any of its hands is zero.