Fraternity Manuals

Meridian (geography)

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This article is about the geographical concept. For other uses of the word, see Meridian.

Image:Prime meridian.jpg On the Earth, a meridian is an imaginary north-south line between the North Pole and the South Pole that connects all locations with a given longitude. The position on the meridian is given by the latitude. Each is perpendicular to all circles of latitude at the intersection points. Each is also the same size and is half of a great circle on the Earth's surface.

Considering the meridian that passes through Greenwich, England, as establishing the meaning of zero degrees of longitude, or the Prime Meridian, any other meridian is identified by the angle, referenced to the center of the earth as vertex, between where it and the prime meridian cross the equator. As there are 360 degrees in a circle, the meridian on the opposite side of the earth from Greenwich (which forms the other half of a circle with the one through Greenwich) is 180° longitude, and the others lie between 0° and 180° of West longitude in the Western Hemisphere (west of Greenwich) and between 0° and 180° of East longitude in the Eastern Hemisphere (east of Greenwich). You can see the lines of longitude on most maps.

The term "meridian" comes from the Latin meridies, meaning "midday"; the sun crosses a given meridian midway between the times of sunrise and sunset on that meridian. The same Latin stem gives rise to the terms A.M. and P.M. used to disambiguate hours of the day when using the 12-hour clock.


This article originates from Jason Harris' Astroinfo which comes along with KStars, a Desktop Planetarium for Linux/KDE. See http://edu.kde.org/kstars/index.phtmlbg:Меридиан

ca:Meridià cs:Poledník da:Længdekreds es:Meridiano it:Meridiano (geografia) nl:Meridiaan (aardrijkskunde) no:Lengdesirkel sk:Poludník sl:poldnevnik zh:经线

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