The sun appears to move westward in the sky, at the rate of almost exactly
1 degree every 4 minutes.
If the solar time is Noon at 70° W, then at the place 5° east of there, the
apparent solar time is [ Noon plus (5 x 4) ] = 12:20 PM.
10.48am
70W is 180 degrees away from 110E, so if it's noon at 70W, it's midnight at 110E.
Since the degrees here are 2 more than the original 70 degrees, and each degree going W equals 4 minutes; if you start at noon, and you multiply (2) degrees by (4) minutes, then you get 8 minutes, which you add to the original time of (noon). You answer is 12:08 p.m.
No. Solar Noon is dependent on longitude. So if two places experience solar noon (also called Local Apparent Noon) at the same time, they are at the same longitude. If "they" also have the same latitude, then it's only one place. So two different places at the same latitude cannot have the same longitude, so they won't have LAN at the same time.
Solar noon is the time when the Sun appears to contact the local celestial meridian. This is when the Sun apparently reaches its highest point in the sky, at 12 noon apparent solar time and can be observed using a sundial. The local or clock time of solar noon depends on the longitude and date.
10.48am
70W is 180 degrees away from 110E, so if it's noon at 70W, it's midnight at 110E.
Since the degrees here are 2 more than the original 70 degrees, and each degree going W equals 4 minutes; if you start at noon, and you multiply (2) degrees by (4) minutes, then you get 8 minutes, which you add to the original time of (noon). You answer is 12:08 p.m.
118 degrees 15' W
No. Solar Noon is dependent on longitude. So if two places experience solar noon (also called Local Apparent Noon) at the same time, they are at the same longitude. If "they" also have the same latitude, then it's only one place. So two different places at the same latitude cannot have the same longitude, so they won't have LAN at the same time.
Solar noon is the time when the Sun appears to contact the local celestial meridian. This is when the Sun apparently reaches its highest point in the sky, at 12 noon apparent solar time and can be observed using a sundial. The local or clock time of solar noon depends on the longitude and date.
12:20 pm
11:56 AM
12:20 PM
75 degrees West.....castlelearning.com
It is 7:00 am.
1 hour