whatever latitude you are at, that is the angle to polaris.. and the other way around
In the Northern Hemisphere, the angle of Polaris above the horizon corresponds directly to the latitude of the location. Specifically, at the North Pole (90°N), Polaris is directly overhead at an angle of 90 degrees, while at the equator (0° latitude), Polaris is on the horizon at 0 degrees. Thus, as one moves northward, the angle of Polaris increases, reflecting the increase in latitude.
Polaris (or the North Star) is almost directly above the North pole. This means that when you stand on the north pole and look directly up, you will see Polaris. This also means that when you stand at the equator and look directly north, you will see Polaris on the horizon. You can not see Polaris from the Southern Hemisphere. The angle Polaris is above the horizon is equal to the degree latitude that you are standing on. Therefore at the equator, Polaris is 0 degrees above the horizon and at the north pole, Polaris is 90 degrees above the horizon.
66.5 degrees
St. Paul is the capital of Minnesota.
The angle of Polaris above the northern horizon increases.
St Paul MINNESOTA? No.
The address of the St. Paul Public Library is: 145 Fifth Street, St. Paul, 72760 0123
Jesus called st. Paul ....err... well...st. Paul I guess
Saul
No, St. Paul is the capital of Minnesota.
June 29 is the feast of St. Peter and St. Paul.