The distance from 43° to 51° north latitude, along a meridian of constant longitude,
is 552.9 miles (889.8 km).
yes you can. It will represent longitude and latitude. Take the longitude and latitude from the first point and from the second one place the values in the formula you get the distance.
Germany is a rather large place. The northern most point of Germany is at Latitude 54.908199, Longitude 8.651733. The southern most point is at Latitude 47.275502, Longitude 10.184326. The western most point is Latitude 51.053481, longitude 5.869446. The eastern most is Latitude 51.272226, Longitude 15.04097.
The difference between latitude and longitude is that latitude refers to a location point's distance that is either north or south of the equator and longitude refers to a specific point's distance that is either east or west of the prime meridian. The prime meridian is the longitude line that has zero degree and passes near London, United Kingdom.
If we understand the question, you're describing a circle on the surface of the earth, with its center at 'Point B', and its radius equal to the known distance. According to your specifications, 'Point A' can be any point on the circle. If you were to also specify the 'azimuth' (bearing or compass direction) from 'Point B' to 'Point A', then 'Point A' could be located by means of a formula which, though comparatively neat and tidy, would need to involve quite a bit of trigonometry.
Both. every place on earth has both longitude i.e. a point between North and south and latitude a point on a line that points in a westerly and easterly direction.
Location of a point on the surface of the earth.
Every point on Earth has both a longitude and a latitude. And if someone gives you a longitude and a latitude, you can use them to find exactly one point on Earth.
Every point on Earth has both a latitude and a longitude.Any point whose latitude is anything between 37° and 40° North,and whose longitude is anything between 95.3° and 102° West,is somewhere in Kansas.
It's longitude Longitude goes vertically from one point and down so it is always going to be the same distance...Latitude goes horizontally so it isn't the same distance. HOPE THIS HELPED!
The point where they cross is zero latitude / 180° longitude.
That depends on your latitude. Longitudes all taper closer together, likethe ribs of a tangerine, as you move from the equator to the poles, andall longitudes meet in a single point at each pole.One degree of longitude represents a distance of about 111.1 km (69 miles)on the equator, and zero at either pole.At any latitude, the distance between two consecutive degrees of longitude is (69 miles) times (cosine of the latitude).
Latitude is measured as the angle between the point and the equator, ranging from 0° at the equator to 90° at the poles. Longitude is measured as the angle between the point and the prime meridian, ranging from 0° to 180° east or west. These measurements help pinpoint a specific location on Earth's surface.