The longitude lines are always the same distance from each other.
Lines of latitude
You can't reach the horizon. No matter where you are or what you do the horizon will always be there in front of you. The distance between the shore and the horizon is infinite.
No matter where earth and Neptune are in their orbits about the sun, Neptune will always be the furthest planet from us. The reason is that the distance between Uranus and Neptune is much greater than the distance between the earth and sun.
Nothing happens. No matter how far north or south you are, 1 degreeof latitude is always the same distance ... roughly 69.1 miles.
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 Earth's distance from the moon or Mars is always changing. The closest the moon can get to Earth is 225,622 miles. The farthest it can get is 252,088 miles. The closest possible distance from Earth to Mars is 33.9 million miles. Therefore the Earth is always much closer to the moon than Mars, no matter where they are in orbit.
You can't reach the horizon. No matter where you are or what you do the horizon will always be there in front of you. The distance between the shore and the horizon is infinite.
No matter where earth and Neptune are in their orbits about the sun, Neptune will always be the furthest planet from us. The reason is that the distance between Uranus and Neptune is much greater than the distance between the earth and sun.
Speed is equal to the magnitude of velocity almost always. Speed is total distance / total time no matter which way the distance goes. Velocity is the distance from a starting point divided by total time.
Nothing happens. No matter how far north or south you are, 1 degreeof latitude is always the same distance ... roughly 69.1 miles.
No, because mass is the amount of matter contained in a body. So whatever may be the distance from the center of gravity it always remains the same.
No. Both forces obey an inverse-square law, so the ratio of electric to gravitational force will always be the same, for the same pair of particles - no matter the distance.No. Both forces obey an inverse-square law, so the ratio of electric to gravitational force will always be the same, for the same pair of particles - no matter the distance.No. Both forces obey an inverse-square law, so the ratio of electric to gravitational force will always be the same, for the same pair of particles - no matter the distance.No. Both forces obey an inverse-square law, so the ratio of electric to gravitational force will always be the same, for the same pair of particles - no matter the distance.
No, when matter becomes heated it always expands, meanwhile when matter becomes cool it always contracts.
When a force (no matter how large it may be) is applied to any object without a distance being moved,it cannot be workdone because,workdone = force x distance.
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!
When a force (no matter how large it may be) is applied to any object without a distance being moved,it cannot be workdone because,workdone = force x distance.
All matter
Matter is always there, has always been there, and won't ever be deleted from existance. Matter can neither be created nor destroyed.