Nothing happens. If you're asleep at the time, or reading a book, nothing attracts your attention, and you wouldn't know that you had crossed the IDL. However, if you're traveling eastward, then before you reach your destination, you must rummage around in the trash basket, find the last day that you tore off of your calendar, and glue it back on. Or else simply crank your calendar wristwatch back to a day earlier than the date it is showing. If you don't do that, then when you reach your destination, your date will be a day later than everyone else there, and life will become complicated and unmanageable. For example: You'll go to your dental appointment a day early and have to sit in the waiting room for 25 hours. You'll be absent from work on Friday, thinking that it's Saturday, but you'll GO to work on Sunday, thinking that it's Monday. And you'll raise a ruckus the day BEFORE pay-day, when you believe you should be getting paid but it doesn't happen.
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.
if you travel east across the international dateline your calendar would be moved back a day.If you traveled west, you would move your calendar a day ahead.Weird, huh?
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 will go back in time which you will not understand which causes dasavou.
Alaska, USA is just east of the International Date Line.
Yes. If you travel from west to east across the International Date Line, the date will change to one day earlier.
Nothing in particular happens; if you happen to be napping aboard the ship at the moment of crossing, you can sleep right through it, just as you do when crossing any other meridian of longitude. By international agreement, however, your calendar date becomes one less when you cross the International Date Line going east.
If you start at 177 degrees, 32 minutes, and 54 seconds West and you are traveling westward, you will NOT cross the International Date Line. You will cross it only if you travel East, at which point the coordinates from 177 degrees West will become 30 degrees, 12 minutes, and 11 seconds East longitude.
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.
North America is on the east of the International Dateline.
If it is Thursday on the west side of the International Date Line, what day is it on the east side?