None. There is no latitude anywhere on Earth greater than 90 degrees.
Latitude with the same name (both North or both South) -Subtract the lesser latitude from the greater latitude. Latitude with different names (one North, one South) -Add their latitudes
No. The farther north you go, the greater your north latitude becomes. As you can see, the 16 minutes is greater than the 4 minutes, so the first latitude in the question is farther north than the second one.
The season and latitude at which the sun does not set are: Summer and greater than 66°N
it is circumpolar if the body has a declination greater than the co-latitude, that is 90 degrees minus the latitude of the observer
"He had a short temper, but gave us greater latitude anyway." or "We finally reached the 7th latitude".
None. There is no latitude anywhere on Earth greater than 90 degrees.
Latitude with the same name (both North or both South) -Subtract the lesser latitude from the greater latitude. Latitude with different names (one North, one South) -Add their latitudes
The equator is zero latitude. 90° north latitude is the north pole. 90° south latitude is the south pole. There is no latitude greater than 90° degrees north or south on Earth.
No. The farther north you go, the greater your north latitude becomes. As you can see, the 16 minutes is greater than the 4 minutes, so the first latitude in the question is farther north than the second one.
The season and latitude at which the sun does not set are: Summer and greater than 66°N
No. The norther you go, the greater your north latitude becomes. As you can see, the 16 minutes is greater than the 4 minutes, so the first latitude in the question is farther north than the second one.
That depends on your latitude. Near the equator, the days will hardly get longer or shorter; the nearer you get to the poles, the greater the difference will be.That depends on your latitude. Near the equator, the days will hardly get longer or shorter; the nearer you get to the poles, the greater the difference will be.That depends on your latitude. Near the equator, the days will hardly get longer or shorter; the nearer you get to the poles, the greater the difference will be.That depends on your latitude. Near the equator, the days will hardly get longer or shorter; the nearer you get to the poles, the greater the difference will be.
it is circumpolar if the body has a declination greater than the co-latitude, that is 90 degrees minus the latitude of the observer
No point on Earth can have those coordinates, since no latitude can be greater than 90 degress north or south.
The coordinates given do not exist. Latitude is never greater than 90 degrees, north or south.
latitudes are basically imaginary circles which round the earth. after the 89th latitude 90th latitude is just a point. nothing exceeds the 90th latitude