The altitude of Polaris, also known as the North Star, is approximately equal to the observer's latitude. In Mamaroneck, which is located at about 42 degrees North latitude, Polaris would be roughly 42 degrees above the northern horizon. This means that if you were to look north from Mamaroneck, Polaris would appear at an angle of 42 degrees from the ground.
It is 89 deg 16 min, approx.
Polaris is approx 46 times the radius of the sun: somewhere between 30 and 34 million kilometres.
It is not 90 degrees. It is 89 degrees 16 minutes, approx.
Approx 800 to 840 ft above sea level
Approx. 900 km/h or 560 mph at cruising altitude.
Polaris is a system of 5 starts: a yellow super-giant whose mass is approx 4.5 times that of the Sun. It has two companions which are around 30% as massive and two more which are smaller and further away.
I've heard form mechanics that dyno tested saying its approx. 115 hp
It is estimated at approx 130 parsecs but more recent papers put it much lower: at around 100 pc.
To find the length of the altitude from a vertex of a triangle given an angle and the length of the side opposite to that angle, you can use the formula: [ h = b \cdot \sin(A) ] where ( h ) is the altitude, ( b ) is the length of the side, and ( A ) is the angle. In this case, ( A = 38^\circ ) and ( b = 14 ). Thus, [ h = 14 \cdot \sin(38^\circ) \approx 14 \cdot 0.6157 \approx 8.63. ] So, the length of the altitude is approximately 8.63 units.
Approx 71.6 miles.
At an altitude of 1000 metres, pure water will boil at approx 96.5 deg C
Altitude of Bucharest: between 55,8 m and 91,5 m(190-295 ft). Around Bucharest are plains and some forest.