"60°W" is 60 degrees west of the Prime Meridian.
"15°E" is 15 degrees east of the Prime Meridian.
If they're both at the same latitude, then "60°W" is four times as far from the Prime Meridian (in miles or km) as "15°E" is.
But if they're not at any particular latitudes, then it's quite possible for "15°E" to be farther from the Prime Meridian (in miles or km) than "60°W" is.
That meridian has no special name. If it's shown at all on a map or globe, it'll be labeled "60".
That depends on what you call 'close'. Greenland occupies the range of longitude between 12.14° and 73.02° west. So the only sure thing is that there are parts of Greenland that are 60 degrees closer to the Prime Meridian than other parts of it are.
A degree of longitude is further subdivided into minutes and seconds. Each degree is divided into 60 minutes, and each minute is further divided into 60 seconds. This system allows for precise location identification on the Earth's surface. For example, 30 degrees, 15 minutes, and 30 seconds east of the Prime Meridian would be written as 30° 15' 30" E.
Longitude measures distance east and west of the Prime Meridian. The Prime Meridian is set at 0 degrees longitude and runs through Greenwich, England. Locations to the east of the Prime Meridian have increasing positive longitudes, while locations to the west have decreasing negative longitudes.
The distance from the Prime Meridian varies according to the latitude of the place. At The Equator one degrees east or west is approcimately 70 miles ( 60 nautical miles). At latitude 60 degrees north or south of the Equator , then one degree east or west is qpproximetely 35 miles ( 30 nautical miles). At latitude 90 degrees north or South ( North Pole or South Pole) , there is no distance between the prime meridian or onr degree east or west, because all the meridians come to a point at the poles. You just rotate on the spot.
That meridian has no special name. If it's shown at all on a map or globe, it'll be labeled "60".
That depends on what you call 'close'. Greenland occupies the range of longitude between 12.14° and 73.02° west. So the only sure thing is that there are parts of Greenland that are 60 degrees closer to the Prime Meridian than other parts of it are.
60 degrees south75 degrees northEach of these has a point on the Prime Meridian.But they are not longitudes.60 degrees west75 degrees westEach of these coincides with the Prime Meridian at the north and south poles.Elsewhere . . .60 degrees west . . . 60 degrees from the Prime Meridian everywhere except at the poles.75 degrees west . . . 75 degrees from the Prime Meridian everywhere except at the poles.So the winner of this whimsical and nearly meaningless contest is . . . 60 degrees west .
47 is a prime, the other two are composite.
15 is a factor of 60.The proof: 15 x 4=60(It is, of course, not a prime factor.)
The GCF is 15 The greatest prime factor in common is 5..
In terms of absolute distance, 60 is closer to 50 than to 75 on a number line. This is because the distance between 60 and 50 is 10 units, while the distance between 60 and 75 is 15 units. Therefore, 60 is closer to 50 by 5 units.
40/4=10 60/4=15 Then the second prime are between 10 and 15, two prime numbers: 11 and 13 The prime number is between 44 and 52 : 47
The prime numbers between 45 and 60 are 47, 53, and 59. The common factors of 45 and 60 are 1, 3, 5, and 15. The greatest common factor of 45 and 60 is 15.
3 x 5 = 15 15 x 4 = 60
60 is not prime.Prime means that it is only divisabled my that number(in your case, 60) and one.60 is divisavble by 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 15, 30 and 60.Very far away from prime
To find the HCF of two numbers you first need to express them as the product of their prime factors. In this case you'd get: 45 = 3x3x5 60 = 2x2x3x5 The next step is to identify any common prime factors. In this case both numbers have a 3 and a 5 as a prime factor. Multiplying these together gives: 3x5 = 15 And so 15 is the HCF of 45 and 60.