No, the Equator goes right through the northern part of Africa
It would appear to fly east based on the Coriolis effect.
Just like the equator, England is right down on the Earth's surface. It's north latitude ranges from roughly 49.97° to 55.81°. It could appear either above or below the equator, depending on how you hold your map, and where the map was printed.
North of the equator, winds turn to their right due to the Coriolis effect, which is caused by the rotation of the Earth. This effect causes moving air to curve to the right in the Northern Hemisphere, leading to clockwise rotation around high-pressure systems and counterclockwise rotation around low-pressure systems. Conversely, south of the equator, winds turn to the left.
The Equator crosses South America, about 20% of South America is north of the equator and 80% is south of the equator.Both, actually. The equator line runs through the northern part. But, the majority of South America is south of the equator.
No, the Equator goes right through the northern part of Africa
It would appear to fly east based on the Coriolis effect.
Just like the equator, England is right down on the Earth's surface. It's north latitude ranges from roughly 49.97° to 55.81°. It could appear either above or below the equator, depending on how you hold your map, and where the map was printed.
The Coriolis effect causes an air mass moving from the North Pole to the equator to bend to the west, or turn toward the right. In the Southern Hemisphere the opposite happens.
Ther are parts of Brazil that are either north of, south of, or right on the equator.
The Coriolis effect causes an air mass moving from the North Pole to the equator to bend to the west, or turn toward the right. In the Southern Hemisphere the opposite happens.
The Equator crosses South America, about 20% of South America is north of the equator and 80% is south of the equator.Both, actually. The equator line runs through the northern part. But, the majority of South America is south of the equator.
The equator is North, as is everything else on earth when you are at the South Pole. From the south Pole, every direction is north.The North pole is the northernmost point on Earth. The South Pole is the southernmost point on Earth. The Equator is a line running circumferentially around the Earth and is midway between the poles. The Equator is south of the North Pole and north of the South Pole.All lines of latitude -- including the Equator -- are north of the South Pole.
The Coriolis effect causes an air mass moving from the North Pole to the equator to bend to the west, or turn toward the right. In the Southern Hemisphere the opposite happens.
Right. Mexico is north of the Equator, hence it is on the northern hemisphere.
The equator stays right where it is ... all the way around the Earth, exactly midway between the north and south poles.
"Meridian of longitude"Your description of the line is interesting. Can you draw a line from north pole to south pole that does NOT form right angles with the equator ???