There is no such place on Earth as "east of the north pole".
None. 90 North is the North Pole.
There is no such latitude as "150 degrees north". The greatest possible north latitude is 90 degrees . . . at the north pole.
It'll be 90 degrees to your left.
The North pole is defined at geodetic latitude 90
The coordinates are 1.5 degrees north, 114 degrees east. So it is closer to the North Pole.
The coordinate 45 degrees 28 minutes east refers to a specific longitude line located in the eastern hemisphere. It runs vertically from the North Pole to the South Pole, passing through several countries, including parts of Russia and Kazakhstan. This longitude is approximately 45.47 degrees east when expressed in decimal format.
As long as you are not standing on either the North or South Poles, the east would be to your right.
The North Pole is located at a latitude of 90 degrees North. Since all lines of longitude converge at the poles, every line of longitude (from 0 degrees to 180 degrees East and West) passes through the North Pole. Thus, while the latitude at the North Pole is fixed, the longitude can be considered variable.
The largest latitude is +90 degrees (North Pole) and -90 degrees (South Pole). The largest longitude is +180 degrees (international date line) and -180 degrees (same meridian on the other side of the globe).
Regardless of the west or east coordinate, all longitudes intersect90 degrees north and thus terminate at the North Pole."90 degrees north" is the definition of the north pole. At that latitude,the longitude doesn't even matter, because alllongitudes merge there.
The South Pole is at 90 degrees S latitude. The North Pole is at 90 degrees N latitude. All lines of longitude converge at both poles. There are 180 degrees of latitude between the North and South Poles, and 90 degrees of latitude between each pole and the Equator.
Between the north pole and the equator, the 140 East meridian crosses territory in Russia and Japan. South of the equator, the same meridian crosses, Indonesia, Australia, and Antarctica.