the answer is 5:20
15 degrees. Minute hand is pointing to the 6 and the hour hand halfway between 6 and 7, which themselves are 30 deg apart.
The minute hand of a clock turns about 360 degrees each hour.
90 degrees
1/3600 Hz
so you can tell them apart
The minute hand is the largest hand on most analogue clocks. At 3 o'clock on a 12-hour clock, the minute hand is pointing straight up to the 12. It measures time to the nearest minute by advancing one of the small minute hash marks every 60 seconds. Every time the second hand makes one full sweep of the clock face, the minute hand advances one of the minute marks. The second hand is the fastest moving hand on a standard analogue clock, making one full sweep every 60 seconds.
10°, on a standard 12-hour clock. The minute hand is pointing at the 4, but the hour hand has advanced by 1/3 of an hour, which is 1/36 of a full circle, or 10°.
15 degrees. Minute hand is pointing to the 6 and the hour hand halfway between 6 and 7, which themselves are 30 deg apart.
The long hand
It is the long hand.
the second hand
90 degrees or (pi)/2 radians, with the hour hand on the right end and the minute hand pointing up.
To show ten twenty on a clock you will first have to place the hands of the clock in the right position. The small hand pointing towards the ten, and the large hand pointing towards the four.
The 5 o'clock big hand on a clock would point directly at the number 12.
That tradition goes back to the beginning of clockmaking. By setting the hands of the clock to 10:10, the clockmaker makes the clock look symetrical (hour hand pointing up to the left and minute hand pointing up to the right) and offers the best view of the workmanship of the clock. Obviously, this only applies to analog clocks (the ones with hands), since a digital clock is not enhanced significantly by the time showing on the clock.
The time period of a nimute hand on the clock is one minute since it takes a minute for it to complete one oscillation, ie., one complete cycle of the clock.
short answer 150o long answer a hour hand pointing at 5 and the minute hand pointing at 12. the calculation is as follows 5(360/12) = 150 the 12 is because their are 12 numbers on a clock, ie the clock is divided evenly into twelfths. 5 is the fifth number after 12 so the resulting number is multiplied by 5