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Longitude measures the angle east or west of the Prime Meridian. It's not a measure of distance.
-- Distance is never expressed in degrees. -- The angle of the arc on the Earth's surface between the Prime Meridian and a location of interest is the location's longitude. It may be expressed in any units of angle.
Distance East or West of the prime meridian is measured in degrees of longitude.
The longitude of a location is its angle east or west of the Prime Meridian.
The 'Longitude' of a place is. "Angular measurement" is correct, but there's no law that says that longitude absolutely must be described in degrees. Any other unit of angle could be just as effective, mathematically and cartographically, even if it's unconventional.
Longitude measures the angle east or west of the Prime Meridian. It's not a measure of distance.
That angle is called 'longitude'.
That angle is called 'longitude'.
That angle is called 'longitude'.
The longitude line measures the angle east or west of the prime meridian. If you want the actual distance you'd travel directly east or west until you hit the prime meridian, you must multiply this angle (converted to radians) by the radius of the earth, and then multiply by the cosine of the latitude angle, which gives the angle north or south of the equator.
-- Distance is never expressed in degrees. -- The angle of the arc on the Earth's surface between the Prime Meridian and a location of interest is the location's longitude. It may be expressed in any units of angle.
The longitude of a place describes its angle east or west, starting at the Prime Meridian.
Distance East or West of the prime meridian is measured in degrees of longitude.
The longitude of a location is its angle east or west of the Prime Meridian.
'Degrees' is not a unit of distance.The angle on the Earth's surface between the Prime Meridian and a locationof interest is the longitude of the location.
The 'Longitude' of a place is. "Angular measurement" is correct, but there's no law that says that longitude absolutely must be described in degrees. Any other unit of angle could be just as effective, mathematically and cartographically, even if it's unconventional.
The distance east or west of the prime meridian?