The northern and southern Hemispheres each comprise 90 degrees of latitude.
On your map or globe, you're free to draw as few or as many lines as you'd like
to see in that range. There is no standard set of 'lines'.
In the northern and southern hemispheres, there are 90 degrees latitude each. In the eastern and western hemispheres, there are 180 degrees longitude each.
North and south Hemispheres: 360 degrees of longitude in each.
East and west Hemispheres: 180 degrees of longitude in each.
The northern hemisphere has all longitudes in it ... 360 degrees.
So does the Southern Hemisphere.
The eastern hemisphere has 180 degrees of longitude in it.
So does the Western Hemisphere.
Any oblique hemisphere ... 1/2 of the sphere for which the cut is not through the poles
and not coincident with the equator ... would have all latitudes and all longitudes in it.
There are 180 degrees of latitude ... 90 from the equator to the south pole,
and 90 more from the equator to the north pole.
That's true regardless of what longitude you're located at ... anywhere in the
eastern or western hemisphere.
There are 90 degrees of latitude in each hemisphere.
In the northern and southern hemispheres, there are 360 degrees of longitude in each hemisphere, whereas there are 180 degrees of longitude each in the eastern and western hemispheres.
180
180
For my Q it is 90
there are ninety lines in each hemisphere There are 90 degrees of latitude in the northern Hemisphere, and another 90 in the southern one. There are 180 degrees of longitude in the eastern Hemisphere, and another 180 in the western one. In each hemisphere, you're free to draw as few or as many lines in that range of numbers as you want to see. There's no standard set of 'lines' that everybody must use. Some maps and globes have more lines on them, some have fewer, some don't have any at all. Would you go into the hardware store and ask the man "How many lines are there on the tape measure ?" ?
The Earth rotates at the rate of roughly 15 degrees of longitude per hour.
You could be in the Eurocentric hemisphere or the Afrocentric one.
The Earth rotates at the rate of roughly 15 degrees of longitude per hour.
There are 24 time zones. Divide 360 degrees longitude by 24 and you get 15 degrees for each one-hour time zone.
one degree, about 111 kilometers at the equator.
The Indian Ocean is not in the western hemisphere. Any ocean that is east of zero degrees and one hundred and eight degrees longitude is, by definition, an eastern ocean.
The ' N ' in the latitude indicates the Northern hemisphere,and the ' W ' in the longitude indicates the Western one.
there are ninety lines in each hemisphere There are 90 degrees of latitude in the northern Hemisphere, and another 90 in the southern one. There are 180 degrees of longitude in the eastern Hemisphere, and another 180 in the western one. In each hemisphere, you're free to draw as few or as many lines in that range of numbers as you want to see. There's no standard set of 'lines' that everybody must use. Some maps and globes have more lines on them, some have fewer, some don't have any at all. Would you go into the hardware store and ask the man "How many lines are there on the tape measure ?" ?
A latitude on the northern hemisphere and longitude on the eastern hemipshere accounts for one quarter of the planet which includes eastern Europe, middle east, India and Asia. The particular city depends on the specific values of "b" for latitude and "a" for longitude.
You could be in the Eurocentric hemisphere or the Afrocentric one.
The Earth rotates at the rate of roughly 15 degrees of longitude per hour.
The Prime Meridian, ie 0 degrees Longitude, runs through the London Borough of Greenwich. You can visit the site and stand with one foot in the Eastern Hemisphere and the other in the Western Hemisphere.
The Earth rotates at the rate of roughly 15 degrees of longitude per hour.
There are 24 time zones. Divide 360 degrees longitude by 24 and you get 15 degrees for each one-hour time zone.
Canada. Note that that is just one point in Canada, which is a big country, stretching over many degrees of latitude and longitude.
Yes it is. If you visit Greenwich, you will see the line of 0 degrees Longitude marked on the ground so you can stand with one foot in the Western Hemisphere and the other foot in the Eastern Hemisphere.