Oh, dude, that's like Brazil. Yeah, so, like, if you're standing at 20S latitude and 50W longitude, you're probably chilling in Brazil. Just imagine yourself sipping on a caipirinha on the beaches of Rio, soaking up the sun at that exact location.
I think the best answer is probably yes. Latitude is the measurement of the globe, the Earth, horizontally from the Equator to the poles. Longitude is the vertical measurement from pole to pole running East & West from the Prime Meridian, 0 degrees, which runs North/South through Greenwich, London. Any place therefore on the Earth has both a Latitude & Longitude. These measurements are listed in a Gazetteer. If New York, for example was, say 50 degrees north of the Equator, all places 50 degrees north have the same latitude, irrespective of where they are in terms of their longitude. If New Yorks' longitude is say, 70 degrees West ( I have no idea, without looking it up just where New York is) then all points on the Earth, both due north or south of New York have the same Longitude. ok so New York is 76 degrees & 42 degrees., just find out which is latitude & which isn't ! when you have done that find out the same measurements for, say,Paris.
A set of latitude/longitude coordinates describes a single point, so it's not possible for a whole country to be there. That particular point is in northeastern Brazil. Any other point in Brazil has different coordinates, and there are a lot of them.
To calculate the current, you can use the formula: current (in amps) = power (in watts) / voltage (in volts). So, for a 50W halogen lamp operating at 12V, the current draw would be approximately 4.17 amps (50W / 12V = 4.17A).
The North Atlantic Ocean. If you were to go a bit further north you would be near where the Titanic is resting. The location 40 N 50W is northeast of Bermuda, and southeast of Newfoundland. It is due north of the Sargasso Sea, an ocean gyre and area of doldrums (light variable winds), named for the floating clumps of brown seaweed often found there.
10 S 50 W is Pium, State of Tocantins, Brazil.
Oh, dude, that's like Brazil. Yeah, so, like, if you're standing at 20S latitude and 50W longitude, you're probably chilling in Brazil. Just imagine yourself sipping on a caipirinha on the beaches of Rio, soaking up the sun at that exact location.
The original 10/40 Window included only countries with at least 50% of their land mass within 10 and 40 degrees north latitude. The revised 10/40 Window includes several additional countries that are close to 10 or 40 degrees north latitude and have high concentrations of unreached people.
I think the best answer is probably yes. Latitude is the measurement of the globe, the Earth, horizontally from the Equator to the poles. Longitude is the vertical measurement from pole to pole running East & West from the Prime Meridian, 0 degrees, which runs North/South through Greenwich, London. Any place therefore on the Earth has both a Latitude & Longitude. These measurements are listed in a Gazetteer. If New York, for example was, say 50 degrees north of the Equator, all places 50 degrees north have the same latitude, irrespective of where they are in terms of their longitude. If New Yorks' longitude is say, 70 degrees West ( I have no idea, without looking it up just where New York is) then all points on the Earth, both due north or south of New York have the same Longitude. ok so New York is 76 degrees & 42 degrees., just find out which is latitude & which isn't ! when you have done that find out the same measurements for, say,Paris.
A set of latitude/longitude coordinates describes a single point, so it's not possible for a whole country to be there. That particular point is in northeastern Brazil. Any other point in Brazil has different coordinates, and there are a lot of them.
Depends on the city. A lot where I live is 50w x 120L.
The country located at 12S 50W coordinates is Brazil.
Since 10w is a factor of 50w, it is automatically the GCF.
The 50W is not a multiviscosity.
A 60VA transformer can run only one 50W bulb.
The coordinates 10°S and 50°W point to a location in the Atlantic Ocean, approximately off the coast of Brazil. This specific area does not correspond to any landmass, but it is relatively close to the northeastern coast of South America. The nearest significant land would be Brazil, particularly its eastern regions.
A typical MR16-50W halogen bulb produces around 900-1000 lumens of light.