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In spherical geometry we look at the globe as the sphere S^2. Any plane intersecting the sphere will create a great circle. Now if you take any point on the globe and reflect it across that plane, you have another point that is equidistant from the plane. The sets of all these points will be equidistant from the great circle.
Surface area of a globe = 4*pi*radius2
"Parallels" of latitude. Those are the lines that are drawn horizontal on the globe or map.
Sphere
The equator.
Intersecting lines drawn on a globe are typically latitude and longitude lines. Latitude lines run east-west and measure degrees north or south of the equator. Longitude lines run north-south and measure degrees east or west of the Prime Meridian. Their intersections pinpoint specific locations on Earth and are used for navigation and mapping.
Me gusta.
Meridians are not parallel. Apart from that, what is the question?
They didn't have any intervals at the Globe, because there was no reason for them. People couldn't take bathroom breaks because there were no bathrooms. At the Blackfriars, however, the lighting was by candlelight, and so they needed four brief intervals to trim and change the candles as required. This would only have taken a few minutes, but it cemented the practice of dividing the plays into five acts.
The lines on the globe are not called "latitude", any more than the marks on a thermometer are called "temperature". The lines on the globe that mark intervals of latitude are called "parallels" of latitude.
Orthographic projections
The new york times. lalalalalalalalalalalalalala
In spherical geometry we look at the globe as the sphere S^2. Any plane intersecting the sphere will create a great circle. Now if you take any point on the globe and reflect it across that plane, you have another point that is equidistant from the plane. The sets of all these points will be equidistant from the great circle.
they appear as straight lines.i needed help w this (?] too shoooot.aha,
they appear as straight lines.i needed help w this (?] too shoooot.aha,
If drawn on a globe at intervals of one degree, there would be 178 lines and two points.
Looking at a sphere, the Earth, from the side, i.e. - the equator, eliminating each 'pole' position, which would appear as 'points', as opposed to 'lines', lines drawn at one degree intervals from top (North) to bottom (South), would number 178; given that there are 180 degrees from North to South.