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Convert Arcminutes to Revolutions

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Science

Angle Converter
10 sig. figures
Formula1 ′ × 0.0000462962963 = 0.0000462962963 rev

About Angle Conversions

Angles run through math, engineering, navigation, and astronomy. The degree, split into 60 arcminutes and 3,600 arcseconds, has been the standard since Babylonian mathematics. The radian, the SI unit, ties arc length straight to radius and is what makes calculus on circles clean: a full turn is exactly 2π radians. Gradians, or gons, cut a right angle into exactly 100 parts, which is why surveyors and civil engineers across continental Europe favor them. Revolutions, full turns, show up in mechanical work for rotation speed. The identities below are exact: 1 revolution = 360° = 2π rad = 400 gon.

Quick Conversions

ArcminutesRevolutions
1 0.0000462963 rev
2 0.0000925926 rev
5 0.000231481 rev
10 0.000462963 rev
25 0.00115741 rev
50 0.00231481 rev
100 0.00462963 rev
250 0.0115741 rev
500 0.0231481 rev
1000 0.0462963 rev
Unit NameSymbolPer 1 Arcminute
Arcminute1
Arcsecond60
Degree°0.0166667
Gradiangon0.0185185
Radianrad0.000290888
Revolutionrev0.0000462963

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I convert Arcminutes to Revolutions?

To convert Arcminutes to Revolutions, use the conversion where 1 Arcminute (′) = 0.0000462963 Revolutions (rev). For example, 1 Arcminute = 0.0000462963 Revolutions.

What are common Arcminute to Revolution conversions?

Here are common conversions: 1 Arcminutes = 0.0000462963 Revolutions, 5 Arcminutes = 0.000231481 Revolutions, 10 Arcminutes = 0.000462963 Revolutions, 25 Arcminutes = 0.00115741 Revolutions, 50 Arcminutes = 0.00231481 Revolutions, 100 Arcminutes = 0.00462963 Revolutions.

When would I need to convert Arcminutes to Revolutions?

Converting between these units is common in international trade, scientific research, and everyday situations where different measurement systems are used.

How precise are the conversions?

All conversions use exact factors verified against NIST and ISO standards with up to 10 significant figures of precision. Results are calculated using IEEE 754 double-precision arithmetic, which provides approximately 15-17 significant digits. For temperature and other non-linear conversions, exact formulas are used rather than approximations.

Sources

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