When the lines of the magnetic field are close together the magnetic field is strong. In a region where the line density is high, one says that it has great intensity or strength. Technically, the density of lines is proportional to the magnitude of the field.
The direction that magnetic field line are oriented provides the information on the direction of the field, with the convention that the lines have arrows drawn so the lines exit from the North pole of a permanent magnet, or equivalently, the arrows point in the direction that the North end of a compass needle would point if placed on the line.
On a topographic map when the contour numbers get bigger that means your going up in elevation. The closer the contour lines are together, the steeper the slope is.
contour lines don't merge. they may get very close together so it looks like they're merging though, this just means that it is very steep.
Closely spaced contour lines mean that the slope is steep.
A contour interval of 20 meters means that each contour line on the map represents a change in elevation of 20 meters. These contour lines help to visualize the shape and steepness of the terrain. The closer the contour lines are together, the steeper the terrain, while further apart lines indicate a gentler slope.
If the contour lines on a topographic map are close together, that area is a steep slope. If the contours have wide spaces in between then the terrain is relatively flat. Many close contour lines mean the elevation is changing rapidly while sparse contour lines mean elevation changes very little.
If the lines are contours - it signifies that the land is steeper the closer the lines are drawn
On a topographic map when the contour numbers get bigger that means your going up in elevation. The closer the contour lines are together, the steeper the slope is.
Contour lines are lines drawn on a map connecting points of the same elevation. They help to illustrate the shape and elevation of the land, showing where the land is flat, sloping, or steep. The closer together the contour lines, the steeper the terrain.
contour lines don't merge. they may get very close together so it looks like they're merging though, this just means that it is very steep.
Closely spaced contour lines mean that the slope is steep.
A contour interval of 20 meters means that each contour line on the map represents a change in elevation of 20 meters. These contour lines help to visualize the shape and steepness of the terrain. The closer the contour lines are together, the steeper the terrain, while further apart lines indicate a gentler slope.
The lines on the map signify the height of a hill. The closer together they are the steeper the hill. At various points on these lines there may be numbers, these show the gradient of the hill... hope that helps!
The lines that connect points having the same elevation are a kind of isopleth called contour lines, or contours.The closer that the lines are on the map the steeper the terrain is.
If the contour lines on a topographic map are close together, that area is a steep slope. If the contours have wide spaces in between then the terrain is relatively flat. Many close contour lines mean the elevation is changing rapidly.
If the contour lines on a topographic map are close together, that area is a steep slope. If the contours have wide spaces in between then the terrain is relatively flat. Many close contour lines mean the elevation is changing rapidly while sparse contour lines mean elevation changes very little.
One contour can not cross another because a contour is one exact elevation; if it crossed another contour it would show that it is higher than the second contour on one side, but lower on the other side.
It means that the magnets are closer together