Clock angle problems relate two different measurements: angles and time. The angle is typically measured in degrees from the mark of number 12 clockwise. The time is usually based on 12-hour clock.
A method to solve such problems is to consider the rate of change of the angle in degrees per minute. The hour hand of a normal 12-hour analogue clock turns 360° in 12 hours (720 minutes) or 0.5° per minute. The minute hand rotates through 360° in 60 minutes or 6° per minute.[1]
Equation for the angle of the hour hand
where:
θ is the angle in degrees of the hand measured clockwise from the 12
H is the hour.
M is the minutes past the hour.
MΣ is the number of minutes since 12 o'clock.
Equation for the angle of the minute hand
where:
θ is the angle in degrees of the hand measured clockwise from the 12 o'clock position.
M is the minute.
Example
The time is 5:24. The angle in degrees of the hour hand is:
The angle in degrees of the minute hand is:
Equation for the angle between the hands
The angle between the hands can be found using the following formula:
where
H is the hour
M is the minute
If the angle is greater than 180 degrees then subtract it from 360 degrees.
Example 1
The time is 2:20.
Example 2
The time is 10:16.
When are the hour and minute hands of a clock superimposed?
In this graphical solution, T denotes time in hours; P, hands' positions; and θ, hands' angles in degrees. The red (thick solid) line denotes the hour hand; the blue (thin solid) lines denote the minute hand. Their intersections (red circles) are when they align. Additionally, orange circles (dash-dot line) are when hands are in opposition, and pink circles (dashed line) are when they are perpendicular.
The hour and minute hands are superimposed only when their angle is the same.
H is an integer in the range 0–11. This gives times of: 0:00, 1:05.45, 2:10.90, 3:16.36, 4:21.81, 5:27.27. 6:32.72, 7:38.18, 8:43.63, 9:49.09,
10:54.54, and 12:00.
(0.45 minutes are exactly 27.27 seconds.)