East. The line at 100 W is farther west than the line at 90 W.
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Your destination is exactly due east of the point of origin, and about 529 miles away.
But if you head out due east to get there, you'll travel about 0.7 miles farther than
necessary, because that's not the shortest, most direct route. In order to conserve
time and fuel, you should set out in a direction slightly north of east ... by about three
degrees.
That'll take you via the great circle route, which will range almost 7 miles north of the
40th parallel in mid-journey, somewhere in the frozen wilds of western Missouri. But
it'll save you a full 3,749 feet off the length of your trip when you're done.
NE (northeast )
Since you're traveling on the surface of a sphere (or close to it), you could head out
in any direction, and by following the curve of the proper circle, wind up exactly where
you want to.
If you want the trip to be as short as possible, then the circle to choose is the 'great' circle,
and you should head out from 15N/65W on the bearing of 57.3 degrees. That's 12.3 degrees
to the right of northeast. By starting out in that direction and following your nose, the trip
is 3,663.17 miles .... the shortest that it can be.
You traveled from northwest to southwest.
East East
SOUTHWEST
i believe you'd be traveling northwest.
Southwest
90 degrees either way. At that point, you're at one of the geographic poles.HAHA
90 degrees from North would be East, then another 45 degrees from that would bring it halfway to South. Therefore, 135 degrees clockwise from North is Southeast.
No, a resultant direction cannot be both thirty degrees west of north and sixty degrees north of west simultaneously. The directions provided are contradictory, so the resultant direction would have to be determined using a single frame of reference.
If you look at a compass, it points north. Each mark is one degree, and there are 360 on a compass, so 30 degrees east of north means that you head towards the thirtieth park to the east (right) of north. On a watch, if 12 o'clock is north, then 1 o'clock is thirty degrees east of it.
If you were standing on the North Pole, you would be looking south in any direction you faced.
i believe you'd be traveling northwest.
we would moving towards west direction
You would be traveling North.The exact direction is 2 degrees East of true North.
40 degrees N is farther north than 35 degrees North, therefore that is a southern direction. If you go from 80 degrees West to 105 W, you are travelling westward, therefore you would be going southwest (you would be travelling from Ohio to New Mexico)
north
90 degrees either way. At that point, you're at one of the geographic poles.HAHA
north west
North East
Northwest
You would be traveling North.The exact direction is 2 degrees East of true North.
Bearing 0 degrees would be north
90 degrees from North would be East, then another 45 degrees from that would bring it halfway to South. Therefore, 135 degrees clockwise from North is Southeast.