Postby ClosetOtaku » Mon Sep 27, 2004 10:11 pm
OK, well, as a short answer... no, it never occurs that the hour hand, minute hand, and second hand split the clock face into three equal parts. It does come very close, though.
Let's just deal with the hour and minute hand first. Let h be the location of the hour hand (in degrees) on the clock face, with 0 degrees at 12 O'Clock.
Let m be the location of the minute hand.
The hour hand traces out 360 degrees in 720 minutes, and so advances 0.5 degrees per minute. The minute hand traces out 360 degrees in 60 minutes, so advances 6 degrees per minute.
We're interested in all circumstances where h and m are 120 degrees apart. We'll start at 12 PM and go with advancing 120 degrees, so our equation is:
h + 120 = m
Substituting, we find
0.5*t + 120 = 6*t, where t is the amount of time that has passed since the start of the hour.
So, we find the answer to our first question is
5.5*t = 120, or
the hands are 120 degrees apart at 12:21.81.
Now, we know exactly where the second hand is here -- at about 48.6 seconds. Problem is that it needs to be at 41.8 seconds to exactly be one-third the way around, so it doesn't fly.
We need to make adjustments to the equation in order to take into account the "starting" time of the hour hand - so, for during the one o'clock hour, we adjust the equation to read
5.5*t = 150, since the hour hand moves 30 degrees per hour. Again, we find that the hour and minute hands are at the correct angle at 1:27.27, but the second hand is sitting at 16.2 seconds, rather than where we want it (about 47 seconds), so that's no good either.
And so it goes. In the interest of completeness, here are all the times when the hour and minute hand are plus/minus 120 degrees apart:
12:21.82
12:43.64
1:27.27
1:49.09
2:32.72
2:54.54 *
3:38.18
4:00.00
4:43.63
5:05.45
5:49.09 *
6:10.91 *
6:54.55
7:16.36
8:00.00
8:21.81
9:05.45 *
9:27.27
10:10.91
10:32.72
11:16.36
11:38.18
I've noted four times when the clocks are exceptionally close to being divided equally. For example, at 2:54.54, the second hand is only 2 seconds away from actually splitting the clock evenly. So I guess it depends how picky you want to be (or how thick the clock hands are).
I'm not going to try an equation (although one is certainly possible).
[EDIT: Started out doing this for two, not three hands! Also had to correct the table.]
"If I find in myself a desire which no experience in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that I was made for another world." -- C.S. Lewis