False.
Lines of longitude are called meridians and converge at the poles. The length of a meridian is determined by the circumference of the Earth, making all lines of longitude the same length. This is because the Earth's shape is an oblate spheroid, with meridians meeting at the poles and being widest at the equator.
The length of longitudes is considered to be the same because all longitudes meet at the poles and form complete circles around the Earth. Each longitude line represents an imaginary half-circle that extends from one pole to the other, dividing the Earth horizontally into equal sections. This design ensures that each longitude line is the same length when measured on a globe or map.
All meridians of longitude have the same nominal length. However, at any given longitude, the meridian of 180° East longitude is the one farthest from the Prime Meridian. Perhaps that's what you had in mind.
Lines of longitude converge at the poles. They are all great circles that intersect at the North and South Poles and are equidistant from each other. This convergence creates lines of longitude that are all equal in length.
No.
-- All meridians of longitude have the same length ... they all join the north and south poles. -- Each parallel of north latitude has the same length as the parallel at the equal south latitude, but no other one.
londirtude is lond and latitude is fat Lines of longitude all run North/South and are all the same length.
The longest line of longitude is the prime meridian, which runs from the North Pole to the South Pole. It has a length of 20,014 km (12,430 miles).
False.
They're all the same length, they converge at the poles.
Lines of longitude are called meridians and converge at the poles. The length of a meridian is determined by the circumference of the Earth, making all lines of longitude the same length. This is because the Earth's shape is an oblate spheroid, with meridians meeting at the poles and being widest at the equator.
The length of longitudes is considered to be the same because all longitudes meet at the poles and form complete circles around the Earth. Each longitude line represents an imaginary half-circle that extends from one pole to the other, dividing the Earth horizontally into equal sections. This design ensures that each longitude line is the same length when measured on a globe or map.
All meridians of longitude have the same nominal length. However, at any given longitude, the meridian of 180° East longitude is the one farthest from the Prime Meridian. Perhaps that's what you had in mind.
All lines of longitude run from North pole to South pole, and are all the same length.
You may be thinking of the distance between lines of longitude. The length of the lines of latitude decrease because the Earth is round, so the length of the line is shorter at the poles than it is at the Equator. The distance between the lines of longitude is shorter as you move toward the poles, again, because the Earth is round. All lines of longitude are the same length.
The meridian of every longitude joins the north and south poles, so it's roughly 12,450 miles long.