Tropic of cancer
The Devine Cross - In the sky there is a great cross that does not move formed by a line along the plain from the center of the galaxy to its edge and the other line is formed along an intersecting plane with a line from the center of the celestial equator to the southern point. The center intersecting point is the center of the Milky Way referred to as the gap or the Dark Riff. This coordinate is fixed. The Mundane Cross - Also referred to as the terrestrial cross, is viewed from the ground. It is formed by the ecliptic intersect of the Equinox and the Solstice. (These points of intersection are called equinoctial points-the vernal point and the autumnal point.)
At the equinoxes, day and night are approximately the same length. The equinoxes are the beginning of Spring (around March 21 in the northern hemisphere), and the beginning of Autumn (around September 23 in the northern hemisphere). I said "approximately" because day and night are not exactly equal, due to the diameter of the Sun, and refraction in the atmosphere. dummyITS EXUINOX
No. The center of gravity of a wedding ring is in the space at the center of the ring. The center of gravity of the letter ' V ' is somewhere along the vertical line between the two slanted lines.
Horizontal speed would be expressed in Miles Per Hour, but vertical speed would be in Feet per minute , measured by a variometer ( or rate of climb indicator- measuring also descent and balanced at 0 at 270 degrees ( West) by analogy with a compass. 270 is the Null point, one then reads up or down. as these are essentially vertical aircraft= along with an altimeter, the variometer would be a basic instrument.
The temperature is displayed along the horizontal axis while the vertical axis is the star's absolute magnitude. So the HR diagram is a scatter diagram relating temperature and brightness, and eah star occupies one point.
The Vernal Equinox is a point in the sky along the 'track' that the sun appears to follow through the stars in the course of the year. In 2010, the center of the sun reached that point at 10:30 AM PST on March 20.
The question could have been written more clearly, I think.Anyway, the answer is "right ascension".That's one of the coordinatesused to define the positionof an objectin the sky on the "celestialsphere".It is angular distance, measuredeastward from the Vernalequinox, along the "celestialequator".
Some part of the northern hemisphere is exposed to vertical rays of the Sun from the spring equinox to the autumn equinox (slightly more than half a year because the Earth is further away from the sun during the northern hemisphere summer, it moves slower along it orbit).
It varies, mostly on how far along we are in the 4-year cycle of leap years and the 400-year cycle of leap centuries and on what part of the world you're asking about (although it's Friday morning where I live, it's Saturday in some parts of the world). Lately, in the U.S., the vernal equinox has been falling around March 20, and the autumnal equinox around September 22, although this year it's on the 23rd.
The rock is very visible by strike-slip
strike-slip faults move along each other from shearing
GPS and interferometric synthetic aperture radar monitor both vertical and horizontal movements along the fault.
Not enough when you factor in the mechanic you'll have to bring along.
If the force is aligned with the horizontal, then its vertical component is zero.
These are the axes.
vertical... i think
Vertical lines always have an undefined slope. Slope for y = f(x) is given by :slope = dy/dxdx is zero at any point along a vertical line, making the slope undefined along a vertical line.