answersLogoWhite

0

The International Date Line corresponds to 180 degrees longitude on the earth. If you imagine the Greenwich Meridian as a circle all the way round the globe (through Greenwich and both poles) the date line is the part of the circle on the "other side" from Greenwich. It is very difficult to follow what is happening at the date line, and if it doesn't take you a long time, you are very bright. The line is right in the center of its time zone. If you are standing right to the east of the date line (to the right as you would see it on a map) and your friend is a few feet away from you, standing just to the west of the line, then your friend will always be exactly one day ahead of you. On your side, it might be 10 am Tuesday October 9. For your friend, it will be 10 am Wednesday, October 10. At the stroke of midnight, you both go to the first hour of the next day. That's the part I had trouble wrapping my brain around. One trick to understanding the date line is to remember that there is another "line" that separates 2 adjacent days-- Midnight. Of course, midnight moves, while the date line is fixed. There are some nations (including the US) that are affected by the placement of the date line, and there are no laws governing its actual location. However, virtually everyone knows that there is a need for such a dividing line. There are also some island nations in the Pacific that are affected by the date line, and all of these affected nations have "defined" the date line to be farther to their east or to their west than the originally defined 180 degrees longitude, so that all of their territory could be operating on the same calendar day. As a result of the change made by the island nation of Kiribati, Caroline Island was the first point on the globe to enter the year 2000.

User Avatar

Wiki User

17y ago

What else can I help you with?