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Imagine you are at the center of the earth, the south pole beneath your feet and the north pole above your head.You see that north pole and south pole are in opposite direction hence the angle (or angular distance) is 180°now think about the equator. from your point of view at the center of the earth it is exactly in the horizontal direction, since north pole is vertically above ,the angular distance will be 90° (it will be the same for the south pole)
The distance between kabba and south pole is 12348,32kms
A Longitude line always runs from Pole to Pole which is the same distance anywhere on Earth. On the other hand, Latitude lines get shorter the farther North or South of the Equator they are.
600mm is the distance between two conductors in 11kv line
The distance is zero. The north pole is one end of the International Dateline. The south pole is the other end.
The distance -- in a direct line -- from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to the South Pole is 8,964 mi.
Please clarify your question. The distance from pole to pole is always the same. 20,014 kilometers, or 12,416 miles when you are measuring across the earths surface. Any points on the earth would have to have its distance from either pole extrapolated and then the number subtracted from the total distance of 12,416 miles to get the distance to the opposite pole. Formula distance to either pole= ( 12,416 - distance to opposite pole ) or 12,416 = X + Pole B Distance or 12,416 = Pole A Distance + X or Pole A Distance = 12,416 - Pole B Distance or Pole B Distance = 12,416 - Pol A Distance
diameter
If you could travel in a straight line from Rio, you would travel about 3,889 miles to the South Pole.
The distance between the North Pole and South Pole is 12,430 miles. This mileage is calculated on the assumption one could travel between these locations in a straight line.
The number you want and expressed in miles, in a straight line, is 10,344.
If you traveled in a straight line, the distance would be about 9,278.675 nautical miles to the continent, then another 750 miles to the pole.
Measured in a straight line, and in miles, the number you want is 3,219.
The number you want in miles and measured in a straight line is 9,219.
If you could travel in a straight line form San Francisco, California to the South Pole, you would travel about 8,600 miles.