Degrees, minutes, and seconds.
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Answer #2:
Latitude and longitude are angles, so any unit in which angles are measured is
a perfectly good unit to describe latitude and longitude.
Units of angular measure include radians, grads, and degrees. Geographic
coordinates are most often, indeed almost universally, expressed in degrees.
Also, since a degree of latitude or longitude is quite a significant distance on
the Earth's surface, it's necessary to be able to indicate fractions of a degree ...
most often as a decimal part, or with the clunky "minutes/seconds" subdivisions.
The three units of measure in which latitude and longitude are given are: degrees (°), minutes ('), and seconds ('').
Longitude and latitude are angles, so it is fitting that they be described in units of angle.
Latitude and longitude represent arcs on the surface of a sphere (the Earth), so they're angles, and they're described in angle units.
A degree of longitude and latitude is further subdivided into minutes and seconds (units of arc, not time).
Latitude and longitude are angles, and are stated in degrees and fractions of degrees.
No. Latitude and longitude are angles, and angles have no physical units. So the numbers are the same regardless of what system of units you like.
The three units of measure in which latitude and longitude are given are: degrees (°), minutes ('), and seconds ('').
Latitude and longitude are angles, since they represent arcs on the surface of a sphere (the Earth). Therefore they're described in units of angles.
Longitude and latitude are angles, so it is fitting that they be described in units of angle.
Latitude and longitude represent arcs on the surface of a sphere (the Earth), so they're angles, and they're described in angle units.
Latitude and longitude are angles, so any unit in which angles are measured is a perfectly good unit to describe latitude and longitude. Units of angular measure include radians, grads, degrees, and others. Geographic coordinates are most often, indeed almost universally, expressed in degrees. Also, since a degree of latitude or longitude is quite a significant distance on the Earth's surface, it's necessary to be able to indicate fractions of a degree ... most often done as a decimal part, or with the clunky "minutes/seconds" subdivisions.
A degree of longitude and latitude is further subdivided into minutes and seconds (units of arc, not time).
Latitude and longitude are angles, and are stated in degrees and fractions of degrees.
On a graph, 'x' and 'y' are marked and measured in length or distance units. Latitude and longitude are marked and measured in angles.
The lines aren't measured at all, any more than the marks on a ruler need to be.It's the latitude and longitude that need to be measured, and lines are oftenprinted on maps in order to make the job easier. Latitude and Longitude are angles,so they're described in angle units, most commonly in degrees and fractions of degrees.If you see a line on a map, every point on the 'line' has the same latitude or the samelongitude, so there's nothing on the line to measure.
Minutes & seconds
Latitude and longitude are angles, and are best expressed in units of angle measurement. Radians and grads would work, but the most commonly used units are degrees, minutes, seconds, and fractions of seconds.