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meridian |
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meridian![]() The meridian line at Greenwich in London, England. A meridian line is an imaginary line that runs from the North Pole to the South Pole. By international convention, the meridian line at Greenwich, which runs through the Royal Observatory telescope, marks 0° longitude and is the point from which all other lines of longitude are measured. Half a great circle drawn on the Earth's surface passing through both poles and thus through all places with the same longitude. Terrestrial longitudes are usually measured from the Greenwich Meridian. An astronomical meridian is a great circle passing through the celestial pole and the zenith (the point immediately overhead). Meridian
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On this day, the sun is directly over the equator and the line separating day from night is due north-south, so all places on the same line of longitude experience sunrise at the same time and daylight lasts from 0600 to 1800. has to cross the equator and every line of longitude. He will cover 21,600 nautical miles, crossing every single line of longitude and the equator, in four and a half months, and his only contact with family members back home will be limited to brief satellite conversations. |
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