if you take off in New Zealand and fly over the international date line and land in Hawaii you fly into yesterday gaining about 16 to 18 hours depending on time of year.
And, of course, if you fly in the opposite direction you lose a day.
If you travel from west to east across the date line, the next day will be the same day you just lived through. For example, If you crossed the date line on a Wednesday, the next day will be Wednesday again. But if you are traveling from east to west across the date line, and you cross on a Tuesday, than the next day will be Thursday, skipping Wednesday altogether.
If you are crossing date line from west to east you'll gain one day.
The International Date Line is the meridian where the date changes by one day when crossed east to west. This happens in order to account for the time difference between different parts of the world. Crossing the International Date Line from east to west, you "gain" a day, and crossing from west to east, you "lose" a day.
The date on the eastern side of the date line is one day ahead of the date on the western side. As you travel across the International Date Line from west to east, you gain a day, and as you travel from east to west, you lose a day.
The International Date Line closely follows the 180-degree meridian. It is an imaginary line that determines where one day ends and the next begins. When crossing the International Date Line from east to west, you 'lose' a day, and when crossing from west to east, you 'gain' a day.
When you cross the International Date Line traveling from Asia to North America, you will lose a day. This is because the Date Line serves as the boundary for calendar days; when you cross it from east to west, you subtract a day. For example, if it's Monday in Asia, upon crossing the Date Line, it will be Sunday in North America.
You don't gain a day by traveling West, only by traveling East. You lose a day going West.
If you are crossing date line from west to east you'll gain one day.
The International Date Line is the meridian where the date changes by one day when crossed east to west. This happens in order to account for the time difference between different parts of the world. Crossing the International Date Line from east to west, you "gain" a day, and crossing from west to east, you "lose" a day.
You "gain" a day - that is, the day shifts to the previous one. So, if it was 11pm on Sunday the 12th, and you crossed eastward over the International Date line, it is now 11pm on Saturday the 11th.
You lose a day
The date on the eastern side of the date line is one day ahead of the date on the western side. As you travel across the International Date Line from west to east, you gain a day, and as you travel from east to west, you lose a day.
No. Assuming you are flying in a jet airliner, you will gain time. For example you may fly a 3 hour flight and arrive only 1 hour after you departed. However, if you fly across the Pacific, you will cross the International Date Line and you gain Day.
i think its wedensday becasue when you east you gain one hour and the date line is 180 degree east
When traveling from west to east then yes, you lose a day. But, when travelling from east to west you gain a day. Example: American Samoa is east of the dateline and independent Samoa is west of the dateline, although there is only about 60 nautical miles between the islands. So Wednesday in American Samoa is Thursday in independent Samoa.
when u travel from west to east u gain a day while when u travel east to west u lose a day. it means that when u go from west to east u are one day ahead from west and when u go to west from east u are one day back from east.
I don't completely understand your question but to lose or gain a day can be done by crossing the International Date Line. If you are standing to the left (west) of this line than you are a day ahead of someone on the other side (east of you).
yes