Every single life on earth will be destroyed in an instant and the earth core/all the lava will probably pour out. Other wise the earth might explode a big chunks of earth will hit other planets :~[]lol
Yes, a hemisphere is a half of Earth divided either by the equator (northern and southern hemispheres) or by the prime meridian (eastern and western hemispheres). Each hemisphere encompasses half of the Earth's surface area and is defined by these imaginary lines.
Marble can be split into halves or smaller pieces by using tools like a chisel and hammer. However, the process requires precision and skill to avoid damaging the marble or creating uneven splits.
There is no such thing as half of the Earth. If you are referring to half of the spherical shape of the Earth then it will be a hemisphere.
in 1234 it will open and split the earth!!
A half of the Earth that is cut longitudinally is referred to as a hemisphere.
to split the earth in half
2 for 1 or half
Hopefully, this is a thought experiment! It is gravitational attraction that keeps objects "stuck" to the Earth, so if the Earth split into half, you would still be attracted to it - although by half as much (as the mass of the Earth would have been halved). So you still couldn't fall off.
Earth will be a little colder on parts
The Equator is the primary one, but any line of longitude will split the Earth into two equal halves.
advantages of split half reliability
A split of champagne is a half bottle
every thing would weigh half its normal weight
Africa is not "split in half" . It remains a viable, single continent.
The Earth is split horizontally by the Equator (zero Latitude) into two halves, the Northern and the Southern Hemispheres. It is further split vertically into the Western and the Eastern Hemispheres by the Prime Meridian (zero Longitude).
The Earth is split into two hemispheres based on the Equator. The North Pole is in the Northern Hemisphere. With the South Pole is in the Southern Hemisphere.
BECAIUSE the red sea could split in half. called a "carno"