Provided the car is traveling at a constant rate of speed, it would seem to take 40 seconds to reach the last pole (2 sec per pole).
However, this only applies if the car began traveling from some point at the same distance from the first pole. No starting point is given. Did the car start at pole one or did it start at a position before the first pole equal to the distance between the poles? If the car started at pole one, then it has only covered 11/19 of the distance from start to end, and will reach the 20th pole in 41.45 seconds.
You can, but the distances are not constant - they are zero at the poles and increase as you go towards the equator.
the minimium distance between the two meridians is at the poles because all the meridians comerge at the poles
It depends on one's latitude, I believe. Distance at the Poles, Zero, at the Equator about 700 miles.
Amio khujchi
No. All of the meridians merge in a single point at the poles.
It remains constant
It remains constant
It remains constant
You can, but the distances are not constant - they are zero at the poles and increase as you go towards the equator.
The distance between the North and South poles
the minimium distance between the two meridians is at the poles because all the meridians comerge at the poles
the distance between latitudes is constant at all places on the globe but distances between longitudes shrinks the further you move away from the equators toward the poles.
a) stays constant b) decreases sharply c) increase d) decreases slightly
what is the distance between the two poles in high jump
12m
20m
Uhhh 5 minutes