Visualize this: Cut the earth in half, and look into one half as if you are looking at a circular target. At the center is the center of the earth. Imagine a line from the center straight up to 12 o'clock and another line from center to 3 o'clock, forming a right angle. At three o'clock you have zero degrees as measured from the center; this is the equator. The individual degrees upward toward the pole at 90 degrees will define arcs on earth's surface of equal distances. These are degrees of latitude.
Lines of longitude are farthest apart at the equator, and they all converge at the poles. So the angular size of any degree will be at its largest at the equator, and will be zero at the poles.
If the distance between charges is increased while the charges remain the same, the force between the charges decreases. This relationship is described by Coulomb's law, which states that the force between charges is inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them.
The length of a country is determined by its longitudinal extent, which is the distance between its easternmost and westernmost points. The breadth, on the other hand, is determined by the latitudinal extent, which is the distance between its northernmost and southernmost points. While India's latitude and longitude may have the same numerical value, the Earth's shape causes a distortion in the lengths of these lines, resulting in the length being greater than the breadth.
Yes when you run faster the distance will get longer.
True. Latitude lines, which measure the distance north or south of the equator, are parallel to each other. They run horizontally around the Earth and remain equidistant from one another, forming circles that decrease in size as they approach the poles.
the force will remain the p
If the magnitude of both charges is doubled and the distance between them is also doubled, the force between them will remain the same. This is because the force between two charges is directly proportional to the product of their charges and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them. Doubling both charges and distance cancels each other out in terms of force.
Yes, because lines of longitude converge at the poles. The distance between longitude lines will always decrease the further you are from the equator. Lines of latitude remain equidistant.This is why no map is always accurate. Think of peeling an orange and try laying it flat on the table.
The Arctic Circle is the southernmost latitude in the Northern Hemisphere at which the sun can remain continuously above or below the horizon for 24 hours.
'Lines' of latitude remain where they are at and do not run. Since every point on the same parallel of latitude is at the same north or south latitude, the only directions left for it to extend in length are east and west.
It wont matter how fast you are travelling. The distance between New York and Los Angeles will remain the same at 3932.8 kilometres. Hope that helps!
The gravitational force between the masses would increase by a factor of 4. This is because the gravitational force is inversely proportional to the square of the distance between the masses, so reducing the distance by half would increase the force by a factor of (1/0.5)^2 = 4.
Parallel lines never intersect and remain equal distance from each other but perpendicular lines intersect at right angles