That's referred to as the star's "declination".
That's the star's "azimuth".
yes
azimuth
That's the star's "azimuth".
Latitude
Latitude.
The distance north or south of the equator is measured in degrees of latitude. For example, the equator is measured at 0 degrees; Sydney Australia lies 33.51 degrees south of the equator; Helsinki Finland lies 60 degrees north of the equator.
Distance is not measured in degrees. Temperatures and angles are. The angle north or south between the equator and a place of interest is the latitude of that place.
That's the star's "azimuth".
That's the star's "azimuth".
That's the star's "azimuth".
Latitude.
Latitude
Latitude.
The distance north or south of the equator is measured in degrees of latitude. For example, the equator is measured at 0 degrees; Sydney Australia lies 33.51 degrees south of the equator; Helsinki Finland lies 60 degrees north of the equator.
Distance is not measured in degrees. Temperatures and angles are. The angle north or south between the equator and a place of interest is the latitude of that place.
It is "A distance north or south of the equator, measured in degrees".But distance is not measured in degrees. The latitude of a place is theangle corresponding to the shortest arc on the Earth's surface betweenthe equator and that place.
The North star will be 75 degrees above the horizon. Whatever degree you are at latitude, the North star will be the same degrees up. So at the north pole (90 degrees north), the star will be at the zenith (straight up). While at the equator (0 degrees north) the star will be at the horizon.
Declination (positive and negative respectively) is the angular distance between north and south of the Celestial Equator.
The north or south angle of any location relative to the equatoris the latitude of that location.