The two points on exactly opposite sides of a circle are parallel to each other. This can be evidenced by finding the derivative/gradient at those points; if they are the same then the two line segments described by those points are parallel.
Lines of latitude circle the earth, parallel to the equator.
Latitude and LongitudeLatitude is the lines that go from east to west, and longitude from north to south.
In North America the symbol used for a receptacle is a circle with two parallel lines drawn through it. The two parallel lines are started out side of the top of the circle and drawn down to the bottom of the circle and stopped at the outside of the circle.
The imaginary parallel lines numbered in degrees around the north and south of the equator are called lines of latitude. The lines of latitude run east-west and are measured in degrees from 0° at the equator to 90° at the poles. They help in determining the location of a place on Earth's surface.
The Antarctic Circle is parallel to the Arctic Circle, as they both mark the latitudes at approximately 66.5 degrees north and south, respectively. These circles denote the points where the sun does not set on the summer solstice and does not rise on the winter solstice.
A circle does not have a set of parallel lines in the traditional sense, as parallel lines are defined as lines that never intersect and remain equidistant from each other. However, you can draw lines that are tangent to a circle at various points, and these tangent lines can be parallel if they are at the same distance from the center of the circle. But in the context of the circle itself, it does not contain parallel lines.
No, parallel lines are straight lines.
a circle
No. The circular shape makes it impossible to have parallel lines just as you cannot have parallel lines in a circle that both reach the length of the diameter of the said circle.
no
Parallel lines within a circle are infinite.
circle
Cdm
None
Yes it does
lines of latitude
A circle intersected by a pair of parallel lines.