... without ever doubling back, then you have traveled about 1,111 km (690.3 miles).
The number is the same for westward travel.
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.
Given a starting point at 0 degrees longitude on the equator, a distance of 100 miles east or west is approximately 1.4 degrees.However, the lines of longitude are closer together towards the poles and furthest from each other along the equator. So, if you start from Greenland with a latitude of 75 degrees and travel 100 miles east or west then you travel 5.7 degrees in longitude. As you approach the poles, all lines of longitude converge into a single point so traveling from the equator to the poles increases the number of degrees in a given distance traveled on the globe.
The Earth rotates at the rate of roughly 15 degrees of longitude per hour.
All the way around anything is a trip of 360 degrees. If you do it again, your total doubles to 720 degrees.
The Earth rotates at the rate of roughly 15 degrees of longitude per hour.
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.
Given a starting point at 0 degrees longitude on the equator, a distance of 100 miles east or west is approximately 1.4 degrees.However, the lines of longitude are closer together towards the poles and furthest from each other along the equator. So, if you start from Greenland with a latitude of 75 degrees and travel 100 miles east or west then you travel 5.7 degrees in longitude. As you approach the poles, all lines of longitude converge into a single point so traveling from the equator to the poles increases the number of degrees in a given distance traveled on the globe.
The Earth rotates at the rate of roughly 15 degrees of longitude per hour.
All the way around anything is a trip of 360 degrees. If you do it again, your total doubles to 720 degrees.
You will immediately be in the Eastern Hemisphere because 0 degrees longitude runs north/south through Greenwich. You will also be in the Northern Hemisphere because you are north of the Equator.
The Earth rotates at the rate of roughly 15 degrees of longitude per hour.
360° of longitude divided by 24 time zones gives 15° per time zone (average)
It is like asking how many apple in 1kilogram rice !Degrees of Longitude or Latitude?longitude is about 111 km per degree at the equator and roughly zero at the poles latitude is always very close to 111 kmSo at the equator moving east or west north or south 23 degrees will travel very close to 2560 km
The earth is almost spherical. So if you travel north from the equator you are on a circular path (a line of longitude), and distance around a circle is measured in degrees. The north pole is at 90 degrees north (so 60 degrees is two thirse the way). Similarly if you travel east, you are going around a circle parallel to the equator. Zero degrees is traditionally at Greenwich in London, England. So 50 degrees east is 50 degrees around this circle (of latitude). All lines of longitude meet at the poles. All lines of latitude are parallel to the equator (which is zero latitude).
The circumference of the Earth at the equator is approximately 24,901 miles. So, if you were to travel around the world at the equator, you would travel around 24,901 miles.
If you travel all the way around the earth without touching the north or south pole, then you travel through 360 degrees of longitude. They're labeled (zero -- 180) east and (zero -- 180) west.
Assuming that the question is referring to Helena, Montana . . . If you travel the short way from Helena to Ulaanbaatar, you cover 141 degrees of longitude.