Every meridian of longitude is perpendicular to every parallel of latitude.
That is, they intersect at right angles.
And here's a fascinating trivia factoid that you can use to amuse and amaze
your friends:
-- No matter how many of these intersections you think there are,
there are more than that.
-- There are an infinite number of meridians of longitude, and every one
of them intersects an infinite number of parallels of latitude.
Parallels of latitude and meridians of longitude intersect in a perpendicular fashion,
forming right (90-degree) angles,
long
A meridian of longitude and a parallel of latitude are perpendicular at their intersection, forming a right angle.
No. All of them do but two. The latitude lines at 90 degrees North and South actually coincide with the intersection of all longitudinal lines. So technically, because they coincide, they do not form any angle.
Meridians of constant longitude cross parallels of constant latitude. Parallels of constant latitude cross meridians of constant longitude. At each intersection of a meridian and a parallel, the lines are perpendicular (form 90° angles).
coordinate grid
If you pick a longitude and mark a dot at every point on Earth with that longitude, the dots will form a line between the north and south poles. The imaginary line is called the "meridian" of that longitude.
A meridian of longitude and a parallel of latitude are perpendicular at their intersection, forming a right angle.
No. All of them do but two. The latitude lines at 90 degrees North and South actually coincide with the intersection of all longitudinal lines. So technically, because they coincide, they do not form any angle.
The imaginary lines that form the earths grid system are called latitude and longitude lines. Latitude lines go horizontally from east to west, where longitude lines go vertical from north to south.
coordinate grid
Meridians of constant longitude cross parallels of constant latitude. Parallels of constant latitude cross meridians of constant longitude. At each intersection of a meridian and a parallel, the lines are perpendicular (form 90° angles).
The lines of latitude and longitude.
If you pick a longitude and mark a dot at every point on Earth with that longitude, the dots will form a line between the north and south poles. The imaginary line is called the "meridian" of that longitude.
Lines that intersect but do not form a right are just called intersecting lines. Perpendicular lines DO form a right angle when they intersect.
When two lines intersect they form an axes.
Perpendicular lines form right angles when they intersect.
yes two lines intersect to form a point two planes intersect to form a line
The special name given to lines of latitude is "parallels," and the special name given to lines of longitude is "meridians." These lines form a grid system that helps in locating any point on the Earth's surface.