Most of it is at 180 degrees.
Depending on your latitude and the date, the direction of sunrise ranges from MANY degrees north or south of East, to directly east. The sunrise in Maine at the Summer Solstice can be 40 degrees north of East, and as many degrees south at midwinter. If you are close to the equator, then the sunrise is never all that far off of East.
It is 550 degrees at the centre of the Sun.
5,600 degrees Celsius.
360 degrees
17 degrees.
the international date line is 0 degrees
it is 4565 degrees that other stuff is bad for you
180 degrees
180 degrees
Roughly 115 degrees in one direction, 245 degrees in the other direction.
180 of them.
No. Greenwich Mean Time is the timezone located along the Prime Meridian, 0º longitude. The International Date Line is on the exact opposite side of the earth at 180º, with some variance. The International Date Line is 12 hours away from Greenwich Mean Time in many areas.
180°
180 degrees, in either the east or west direction, at any latitude.
The International Date Line is nominally the line of 180 degrees longitude, both east and west ... exactly opposite the Prime Meridian and half-the-earth away from it. The Line was drawn with some jogs and zig-zags in it for political reasons, mainly to avoid having it split island nations or contiguous areas of national interest.
The Prime Meridian is located at 0 degrees, the international date line is not. There is only one prime meridian, there are many international date line.
The International Date Line is NOMINALLY the meridian of 180 degrees longitude (both east and west).The actual date line has been defined with a few bumps and jogs in it that depart from 180 degrees, in order to avoid cutting through island nations. (That would have put two different calendar dates in the same country.)