It would be closer to the Equator, but just barely. Madison, Wisconsin is about 185 miles south east of Cadott, Wisconsin. Cadott is pretty much exactly half way between the North Pole and the Equator.
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.
You would need to travel toward the south to reach the equator. Because Dallas is in the Northern Hemisphere not the southern hemisphere. BTW the Northern Hemisphere is the upper half of the earth. The Southern Hemisphere is the lower part of the earth.
The equator stays right where it is ... all the way around the Earth, exactly midway between the north and south poles.
If you wanted to travel from Antarctica to the equator, you would need to head north. Antarctica is located at the southernmost point on Earth, while the equator is an imaginary line that runs around the middle of the Earth. Traveling north from Antarctica would take you towards the equator, which is located at 0 degrees latitude.
The density I beleive
to get from Elgin to the equator you would travel.
Insulation decreases with increasing latitude due to the angle at which sunlight reaches the Earth's surface. At higher latitudes, the sun's rays are more spread out and travel through more atmosphere before reaching the surface, leading to lower insulation levels. This results in cooler temperatures at higher latitudes compared to lower latitudes.
The only ways you can travel along the equator is by going due west or due east and you can do it indefinately. Any other direction you would not be travelling along the equator
a give point doesn't travel. It is stationary.
north
No.
It would be closer to the Equator, but just barely. Madison, Wisconsin is about 185 miles south east of Cadott, Wisconsin. Cadott is pretty much exactly half way between the North Pole and the Equator.
You would travel north to accomplish this trip.
Partially. The pressure difference between warm air near equator and cold air near arctic causes air to rise at equator travel north to arctic then down and south back to equator. The rotation of the earth bends that north-south belt - faster at the equator than at the slower rotation at arctic. The result of both is the jet stream.
That would depend on exactly where on the the equator you are. If you are on the equator by Brazil then you would have to steer south. If you are on the equator nea PNG the you have to steer east.
That would depend on exactly where on the the equator you are. If you are on the equator by Brazil then you would have to steer south. If you are on the equator nea PNG the you have to steer east.