Unless you include some form of coordinates it simple produces two hemispheres, providing the cut is central to the axis.
for acting to the audience better
The globe theatre was circular shaped, and there was no real reason for it being the shape it was, just a design, I think.. :D It did have a cut out roof though, to let the actors have more of an 'open air' performance.
slide...cut....cut........
It is made entirely of wood no nails, no glue, it just all slots together. It is just like a giant 3D jigsaw puzzle, on piece is just cut with a hole in and another with an extra block of wood still attached so that they slot together and they are packed so tightly that they will not fall apart.hope that this helped, :)
The Globe theatre was built in 1599. It was destroyed by fire in 1613, and rebuilt with modern construction techniques in 1997. Although Shakespeare invested in the Globe (as well as the Blackfriars Theatre) he did not build it.
The Earth is a globe (an oblate spheroid) that is separated vertically by the Prime Meridian (zero degrees longitude) into the Western Hemisphere and the Eastern Hemisphere.
The Earth is a globe (an oblate spheroid) that is separated into the Northern Hemisphere and the Southern Hemisphere by the Equator (zero degrees latitude). The Equator horizontally encircles the Earth.
The Earth is a globe (an oblate spheroid) that is separated into the Northern Hemisphere and the Southern Hemisphere by the Equator (zero degrees latitude). The Equator horizontally encircles the Earth.
If you cut it vertically, then potentially
Two hemispheres
We get two hemispheres.
a smaller cylinder when cut horizontally. A semi-circle when cut vertically
Yes, you can cut a rectangle any way you please.
Two right-triangular prisms.
You can imagine an enormous knife, cutting the Earth into two pieces. Whenever the center of the Earth is on the cut, the pieces are equal, and they're both hemispheres. If you cut through the equator, then you have the northern and southern hemispheres. If you cut through the Prime Meridian, then you have the eastern and western ones.. If you cut any other way, then you have a couple of hemispheres that are not of much use to anyone, since they have no relationship to the Earth's rotation, and those don't have names.
5
Yes.