Stage 13 · First Steps in Geometry

13.5  Meeting and Measuring Angles

An angle is the opening between two rays — and a protractor tells you how wide.

Ages 11–14 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 4 of 4 in this lesson: 13.5.4 Minutes and seconds — the 60-carry

13.5.4 Minutes and seconds — the 60-carry

Whole degrees are not always fine enough. Just like an hour splits into minutes and seconds, a degree splits into 60 minutes, and a minute splits into 60 seconds:

1° = 60′   and   1′ = 60″

The mark means minutes of arc and means seconds of arc — same names as clock time, because they share the same base-60 idea. And that means they carry the same way: whenever minutes reach 60, they become 1° and you carry; whenever seconds reach 60, they become 1′ and you carry.

Worked example

Add 38′ + 35′. That's 73′ — but 73 is more than 60, so 60 of those minutes become a whole degree: 73′ = 60′ + 13′ = 1° 13′. The 60 carried, exactly like adding 38 minutes to 35 minutes on a clock.

Try it Add two amounts of minutes and watch the 60 carry
Set two minute counts. When their total reaches 60′, one whole degree carries out — see the result rewrite itself as D° M′.
First 40
Second 35
Watch out

Minutes and seconds do not roll over at 100 — they roll over at 60. So 75′ is not "0.75°"; it is 60′ + 15′ = 1° 15′. Treat every degree-measure like a little clock.

eastmath.com · 13.5 Meeting and Measuring Angles · 13.5.4 Minutes and seconds — the 60-carry