The land on the Arctic Circle is divided among eight countries: Norway, Sweden, Finland, Russia, the United States (Alaska), Canada, Denmark (Greenland), and Iceland (where it passes through the small offshore island of Grímsey).
No, not all chords of a circle pass though the center of that circle. Any cord that does pass through the center of the circle is called diameter of that circle.
A diameter of a circle must pass through the center of that circle. A cord is a line segment that has its endpoints on the circumference of a circle. It can be any line segment. If that cord also passes through the center of the circle, it is said to be a diameter of that circle. A diameter of a circle is the longest cord of the circle.
Three
Yes a diameter will ALWAYS pass through the center
No, a secant line does not pass through the center of a circle. A secant line is a line that intersects a circle in two distinct points. Only a line passing through the center of a circle is called a diameter.
None.
There is no Atlantic Circle. The Antarctic Circle passes through no countries. See the related link for a map of the Antarctic Circle.
None.
None.
The Antarctic Circle passes through Antarctica, which is a continent with no countries.
The Arctic Circle does not pass through any South American countries.
The Antarctic Circle does not pass through any countries.
None. No states or countries either.
None.
The Antarctic Circle does not pass through any countries. The Antarctic circle only passes through Antarctica. Since Antarctica has no countries, the Antarctic circle does not pass through any.
The Antarctic Circle doesn't pass through any countries at all.
The Antarctic Circle only passes through Antarctica.