-- Any latitude number must be accompanied by the tag 'north' or 'south';
otherwise nobody can tell which side of the equator you're talking about.
-- There is no such thing as a latitude greater than 90 degrees, on either side
of the equator.
-- Even with a legitimate latitude, there is no such thing as the 'opposite side
of the Earth', since every latitude is marked by a circle that exists all the way
around the globe.
-- If there were such a thing as the 'opposite side' from the latitude you named,
wouldn't you expect it to be another latitude, rather than a longitude ?
Otherwise, it's a fine question, thought provoking, intellectually challenging, and
intriguing in its own right.
The line of longitude directly opposite 60 degrees west is 120 degrees east. Opposite longitudes are always 180 degrees apart on the globe.
The largest possible values for longitude range from -180 degrees to +180 degrees. This means that the biggest numbers in longitude are 180 degrees east and 180 degrees west, which actually represent the same line on the opposite sides of the Earth. Longitude measures the distance east or west of the Prime Meridian, which is at 0 degrees.
Travelling all the way around the Earth from the the Prime Meridian (0°) takes you in a circle of 360°Therefore, at the exact opposite side of the Earth as the prime Meridian is 180°.Longitude is measure from 0° to 180° either East or West of Greenwich so it ends at 180°.
Longitudes mark the distance east or west of the Prime Meridian, which is 0 degrees longitude. They help determine locations on the Earth's surface and are measured in degrees from 0 to 180 degrees east and west.
The maximum longitude is 180°, at any point on the line directly opposite the Prime Meridian. (The line which, combined with the Prime Meridian, forms a complete circle around the Earth and through the poles.)
The line of longitude directly opposite 60 degrees west is 120 degrees east. Opposite longitudes are always 180 degrees apart on the globe.
The largest possible values for longitude range from -180 degrees to +180 degrees. This means that the biggest numbers in longitude are 180 degrees east and 180 degrees west, which actually represent the same line on the opposite sides of the Earth. Longitude measures the distance east or west of the Prime Meridian, which is at 0 degrees.
Travelling all the way around the Earth from the the Prime Meridian (0°) takes you in a circle of 360°Therefore, at the exact opposite side of the Earth as the prime Meridian is 180°.Longitude is measure from 0° to 180° either East or West of Greenwich so it ends at 180°.
Longitudes mark the distance east or west of the Prime Meridian, which is 0 degrees longitude. They help determine locations on the Earth's surface and are measured in degrees from 0 to 180 degrees east and west.
360 degrees. Longitude runs from 180 degrees East to -180 degrees West.
The maximum longitude is 180°, at any point on the line directly opposite the Prime Meridian. (The line which, combined with the Prime Meridian, forms a complete circle around the Earth and through the poles.)
It has no opposite. The complimentary term is latitude.
Latitude and longitude are measured in degrees, with latitude representing north-south position and longitude representing east-west position on the Earth's surface.
The degree of longitude equivalent to east of 5 degrees west longitude is 355 degrees. This is because there are 360 degrees in a full circle, so moving 5 degrees east from 5 degrees west would place you at 355 degrees longitude.
It's a description of a single point on the surface of the earth. The point is in northeastern Turkey.
The 60 degrees east line of longitude runs through the Ural Mountains.
There is no 200 degrees of longitude. There is 180 degrees west of the Greenwich Meridian and 180 degrees east of the Greenwich Meridian. All degrees of longitude on earth converge at the South and North Poles.