Degrees.
The unit of measure used to determine absolute location is degrees and minutes of latitude and longitude. The Earth has 360 degrees at the equator.
Latitude is measured as the angle between the point and the equator, ranging from 0° at the equator to 90° at the poles. Longitude is measured as the angle between the point and the prime meridian, ranging from 0° to 180° east or west. These measurements help pinpoint a specific location on Earth's surface.
Latitude and longitude are written in degrees to measure angles. The Earth is divided into 360 degrees of longitude and 180 degrees of latitude, with 0 degrees at the equator and the Prime Meridian, respectively. This system allows for precise and universal location coordinates across the globe.
Latitude, 0 to 90 N and S Longitude 0 to 360.
It's 1/360 of a complete circle of longitude or latitude.
"Longitude" and "latitude" are the coordinates used primarily in the system of locating points on the earth's surface. Even when that generalization doesn't hold, they're only applicable to the location of points on the surface of another sphere. There's no way to use that kind of system to locate a planet.
Latitude and longitude are angles, and are best expressed in units of angle measurement. Radians and grads would work, but the most commonly used units are degrees, minutes, seconds, and fractions of seconds.
None. Latitude lines circle the Earth east and west, and measure the angular distance from the plane of the equator. Although there are 180 degrees of latitude (90 N and 90 S), and 360 degree-intervals for longitude (180 E and 180 W), there can be an infinite number of lines depending on how precisely you want to measure.
-- The northern and southern hemispheres each have 90 degrees of latitude and 360 degrees of longitude. -- The eastern and western hemispheres each have 180 degrees of latitude and 180 degrees of longitude.
A full circle around the globe is 360 degrees. This measurement is based on the Earth's latitude and longitude system, where the equator is at 0 degrees latitude and the poles are at 90 degrees north and south. Each degree of longitude represents a segment of the Earth's circumference, with 360 lines of longitude running from pole to pole.
Any line all the way around the Earth covers 360 degrees of longitude.
The Earth is divided into 360 degrees of longitude and 180 degrees of latitude. Latitude measures how far north or south a location is from the Equator, while longitude measures how far east or west a location is from the Prime Meridian. Each degree of latitude is approximately 69 miles apart, while the distance represented by a degree of longitude varies depending on the latitude.