Degrees.
The unit of measure used to determine absolute location is degrees and minutes of latitude and longitude. The Earth has 360 degrees at the equator.
Longitude and latitude are measured in terms of degrees, minutes and seconds. Longitude has 360 degrees, while latitude 180 degrees of latitude.
Latitude, 0 to 90 N and S Longitude 0 to 360.
It's 1/360 of a complete circle of longitude or latitude.
None. Latitude lines circle the Earth east and west, and measure the angular distance from the plane of the equator. Although there are 180 degrees of latitude (90 N and 90 S), and 360 degree-intervals for longitude (180 E and 180 W), there can be an infinite number of lines depending on how precisely you want to measure.
-- The northern and southern hemispheres each have 90 degrees of latitude and 360 degrees of longitude. -- The eastern and western hemispheres each have 180 degrees of latitude and 180 degrees of longitude.
Any line all the way around the Earth covers 360 degrees of longitude.
It can mean: 1. A unit to measure angles. 2. A unit to measure latitude and longitude, derived from the above. 3. An academic rank or achievement, awarded by a university.
Latitude and longitude are angles, and are described in the same units as any other angular quantity. 60 seconds = 1 minute 60 minutes = 1 degree 360 degrees = 1 full circle
Precision GPS receivers are used to measure latitude and longitude. There are vastly more than 360 of them. Once measured, the geographic coordinates may be expressed in any unit of angle measure, since they are, after all, angles, and would best not be measured in, for example, gallons. One possible choice of angle units is the "radian". Latitudes extend from zero to 1/2 pi radians, both north and south. Longitudes range from zero to pi radians, both east and west. A more popular angle unit is the "degree". Latitudes run from zero to 90 of them, both north and south. Longitudes range from zero to 180 of them, both east and west. Since the Earth is, after all, a sphere, or close to it, we find, just as we would expect, that a complete trip around the Earth in the north/south direction takes us through 360 degrees of latitude, whereas a complete trip around the Earth in the east/west direction takes us through 360 degrees of longitude. If measurements are required to be more precise than the nearest 35 miles or so, then the degree may be subdivided into its 60th part, called "minute", and even into its 3,600th part, called "second".
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.
Take for example: 75°57′8″W, a line of longitude. We all know that lines of longitude measure the time zones. There are 360 degrees of longitude, and there are 24 hours in a day. Therefore, an hour would be 15 degrees longitude (360/24). 75° would be the number of degrees of longitude. If we take 75 and divide it by 15, we get the number of hours that we want, in this case, 5 hours. 57′ would be the number of minutes. 8″ would be the number of seconds. Sometimes, there are even milliseconds. They are the decimals after the number of