How do I express the frequency of the hour hand?

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The frequency of the hour hand can be expressed as 1/43,200 Hz, which is derived from the time it takes to complete one full revolution in 12 hours (43,200 seconds). This frequency represents cycles per second, with the hour hand completing two cycles per day. The discussion emphasizes that understanding frequency involves recognizing it as cycles per second and suggests alternative units like revolutions per minute (RPM) or radians per second. The explanation clarifies that no complex math is necessary to determine the hour hand's frequency. Overall, the key takeaway is the relationship between time taken for a complete revolution and the resulting frequency in Hertz.
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I know that in a second it is 1/60 Hz. In a minute it is 1/3600 Hz. How do I express it in hour hand? I am a little confused.
 
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I don't just want the answer, also the explanation so that I know! I am just a little confused...thx
 
I think 1/43,200 Hz? But I am just a little confused with the explanation.
 
You're not making any sense. Hz is cycles per second. So how many cycles per second do you have (of what?)? Per hour?

[edit] er - I missed the title...you shouldn't need any math to do the frequency (revolutions?) of the hour hand per hour. And then you can go from there to the other two.
 
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LoveKnowledge said:
I think 1/43,200 Hz? But I am just a little confused with the explanation.

Your answer is correct. The cyclic frequency in Hertz is just the reciprocal of the period in seconds. (f=1/T)

Here T=43200 seconds which is the time it takes the hour hand to go around once, which it does in 12 hours, of course.

There is not much explanation that one can give other that to consider the definition of frequency in Hz as cycles per second.

Other units for frequency include revolutions per minute RPM and radians per second, angular frequency.

The hour hand also spins at 1/720 RPMs.

Of course, you are free to make up your own units, and expressing frequency as 2 cycles per day might not be a bad idea.
 
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