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That depends on the time of year as a result of the Earth's tilt. The rays are strongest between the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn, Cancer at the Northern hemisphere Midsummer (June) and Capricorn at the Southern Hemisphere Midsummer (December).

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10y ago

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What is a flash party?

it is a party you plan at the lat second


What is toposheet?

A toposheet is a shortened name for 'Topographic sheet'. they essentially contain information about an area like roads, railways, settlements, canals, rivers, electric poles, post offices etc. According to their usage, they may be available at different scales (e.g. 1:25000, 1: 50000 etc, where the former is a larger scale as compared to the latter). They are made on a suitable projection for that area and contain lat-long information at the corners. Thus any point on it can be identified with its corresponding lat-long, depending upon the scale (i.e. if the scale is large, more accurate lat-long).


Artery used as a pulse point?

Several arteries are used as pulse points including: The radial artery (Lat.: A. Radialis) on the underside of a persons wrist is often used, because of its easy accessibility. The femoral artery (Lat.: A. Femoralis) is also, although rarely, used. The jugular artery (Lat.: A. Carotis communis) is often used. Two other rather important pulse points are located in the feet: The dorsal artery (Lat.: A. dorsalis pedis aka. A. Tibialis Ant.) and the posterior tibial artery (A. Tibialis post.). The radial artery is without question the most often used pulse point. Regarding the systolic blood-pressure in critically ill patients the following rule of thumb is observed: No pulsation in the radial artery, but pulsation in both femoral and jugular => Systolic pressure of ~80 mmHg. No pulsation in either the radial nor femoral, but pulsation in jugular => Systolic pressure of ~70 mmHg. No pulsation in either of the three points => Systolic pressure of ~60 mmHg. This is rarely observed. The two points located on the foot of a patient are often used to assess vascular conditions in this area. This is often relevant after trauma of the leg and/or foot. It should be noted, that in healthy individuals, the dorsalis pedis, posterior tibial and femoral pulses are impalpable in ~8 %, ~3% and 0 % of the time respectively. When assessing the pulse, you check for: - quality - rate - rhythm - amplitude Note should also be given to the fact, that the brachial artery (Lat.: A. brachialis) is quite often used as the artery for blood-pressure measurement.


How can read UTM coordinates for area from Google Earth Pro?

In Google Earth Pro you can change the coordinate format to show in UTM. Under Tools / Options menu change "Show Lat/Lon" choice to Universal Transverse Mercator. You also need to make sure the Status Bar is active which can be selected in the View menu.


What type of map projection is shown on the Google earth opening page?

Google Earth uses a Simple Cylindrical (Plate Carree) Projection with a WGS84 datum for its imagery base. Altitude is measured from the vertical datum (WGS84 EGM96 Geoid).This is a simple map projection where the meridians and parallels are equidistant, straight lines, with the two sets crossing at right angles. This projection is also known as Lat/Lon WGS84.