It's longitude.
The northern and southern Hemispheres each comprise 90 degrees of latitude. On your map or globe, you're free to draw as few or as many lines as you'd like to see in that range. There is no standard set of 'lines'.
there are 180 degrees of latitudes 90 in each hemisphere 181 in total counting the equator
=the southern hemisphere is one half of the planet. which would be south of the equator so, from the equator which equals zero to 180 degrees from the equator== hemisphere= half ball== 180 degrees+180 degrees=360 degrees which is the amount of degrees in a ball=
Eastern hemisphere.
there are ninety lines in each hemisphere There are 90 degrees of latitude in the northern Hemisphere, and another 90 in the southern one. There are 180 degrees of longitude in the eastern Hemisphere, and another 180 in the western one. In each hemisphere, you're free to draw as few or as many lines in that range of numbers as you want to see. There's no standard set of 'lines' that everybody must use. Some maps and globes have more lines on them, some have fewer, some don't have any at all. Would you go into the hardware store and ask the man "How many lines are there on the tape measure ?" ?
The northern and southern Hemispheres each comprise 90 degrees of latitude. On your map or globe, you're free to draw as few or as many lines as you'd like to see in that range. There is no standard set of 'lines'.
180 degrees
there are 180 degrees of latitudes 90 in each hemisphere 181 in total counting the equator
=the southern hemisphere is one half of the planet. which would be south of the equator so, from the equator which equals zero to 180 degrees from the equator== hemisphere= half ball== 180 degrees+180 degrees=360 degrees which is the amount of degrees in a ball=
Eastern hemisphere.
hemispheres and deg (degrees) are not compatible. solid angles are measured in steradians of spheres 2pi steradians or 0.5 spheres in a hemisphere In cartography, a hemisphere would encompass 180 degrees of longitude.
I think you mean the eastern hemisphere, eastward from the Greenwich Meridian all the way to 180 degrees longitude, and the Western Hemisphere, westward from the Greenwich Meridian all the way to 180 degrees longitude.
Places east of Greenwich for 180 degrees are called the International Date Line.
there are ninety lines in each hemisphere There are 90 degrees of latitude in the northern Hemisphere, and another 90 in the southern one. There are 180 degrees of longitude in the eastern Hemisphere, and another 180 in the western one. In each hemisphere, you're free to draw as few or as many lines in that range of numbers as you want to see. There's no standard set of 'lines' that everybody must use. Some maps and globes have more lines on them, some have fewer, some don't have any at all. Would you go into the hardware store and ask the man "How many lines are there on the tape measure ?" ?
There are 180 degrees of latitude in both the eastern and western hemispheres.
The northern and southern hemispheres each have 360 degrees of longitude. The eastern and western hemispheres each have 180 degrees of longitude. You can use as many or as few 'lines' as you want, to mark off any number of degrees.
I think you mean the eastern hemisphere, eastward from the Greenwich Meridian all the way to 180 degrees longitude, and the western hemisphere, westward from the Greenwich Meridian all the way to 180 degrees longitude.