At the poles.
Latitudes are parallel to the equator. Longitudes converge like elastics on a soccer ball.
Yes. All longitudes converge (meet) at the north and south poles.
All longitudes converge at the north and south poles.
Longitudes are lines that run north to south on a globe. At the poles, longitudes converge and meet because all lines of longitude, or meridians, come together at a single point. This means that at the poles, there is no east or west direction left to differentiate between, so the longitudes effectively merge together.
All longitudes converge at the north and south poles.
If they did, then you'd have two different longitudes at the same point, which isgenerally a no-no.The only places where that happens is at the north and south poles, where all longitudesconverge (meet, come together).
There are 360 longitudes
Parallel lines never meet. On the other hand, every pair of longitudes meets at the Earth's North and South Poles.
Longitudes and latitudes meet at every point on the planet. since both latitude and longitude are human ideas, not real objects, nothing is formed at those intersections. however, if you know which particular latitude and longitude meet at some specific point of interest, then you know the map coordinates of that place.A mathematician would say that any line of longitude and any line of latitude form a right angle where they meet.
You'll have to be more specific. Every latitude crosses all longitudes, and every longitude crosses all latitudes.
as all the places on the same longitude have their noon at the same time
The length of longitudes is considered to be the same because all longitudes meet at the poles and form complete circles around the Earth. Each longitude line represents an imaginary half-circle that extends from one pole to the other, dividing the Earth horizontally into equal sections. This design ensures that each longitude line is the same length when measured on a globe or map.