No.
Right Ascension is the 'longitude' of celestial objects. The celestial 'Prime Meridian' ... the position defined as zero RA is the celestial meridian that passes through the Vernal Equinox, and the Right Ascension of every point in the sky is measured westward from there. It's expressed in terms of hours, minutes, and decimal seconds, where 1 hour corresponds to 15 degrees of angle. Notice that unlike terrestrial longitude, Right Ascension isn't measured in both directions from the zero meridian. There's no east or west Right Ascension, only one number, that ranges from zero through 24 hours.
Yes, latitude and right ascension are both coordinate systems used for locating objects on the celestial sphere. Latitude is measured in degrees north or south of the celestial equator, while right ascension is measured in hours, minutes, and seconds eastward from the vernal equinox. Right ascension is analogous to longitude on Earth.
Right Ascension in space is equivalent to Longitude on Earth but it is measured in hours minutes and seconds rather than degrees, minutes and seconds. 1 hour of RA is equivalent to 15° of longitude. Declination in Space is equivalent to Latitude on Earth. Both are measure in degrees, minutes and seconds. Declination is measured from the Celestial Equator, + being north and - being south, just like Latitude.
Degrees, Minutes and Seconds of arc. Same as longitude.
In the International System of Units (SI Units), time is measured in seconds.
Right ascension is measured in hours, minutes, and seconds, with a range from 0 hours to 24 hours. This corresponds to a full circle around the celestial sphere. Each hour is divided into 60 minutes and each minute into 60 seconds.
Right Ascension is the 'longitude' of celestial objects. The celestial 'Prime Meridian' ... the position defined as zero RA is the celestial meridian that passes through the Vernal Equinox, and the Right Ascension of every point in the sky is measured westward from there. It's expressed in terms of hours, minutes, and decimal seconds, where 1 hour corresponds to 15 degrees of angle. Notice that unlike terrestrial longitude, Right Ascension isn't measured in both directions from the zero meridian. There's no east or west Right Ascension, only one number, that ranges from zero through 24 hours.
Right ascension is essentially the longitude on a star chart where you may look to find something in the sky among the stars. The distance of a point east of the First Point of Aries, measured along the celestial equator and expressed in hours, minutes, and seconds.
Yes, latitude and right ascension are both coordinate systems used for locating objects on the celestial sphere. Latitude is measured in degrees north or south of the celestial equator, while right ascension is measured in hours, minutes, and seconds eastward from the vernal equinox. Right ascension is analogous to longitude on Earth.
Right Ascension in space is equivalent to Longitude on Earth but it is measured in hours minutes and seconds rather than degrees, minutes and seconds. 1 hour of RA is equivalent to 15° of longitude. Declination in Space is equivalent to Latitude on Earth. Both are measure in degrees, minutes and seconds. Declination is measured from the Celestial Equator, + being north and - being south, just like Latitude.
Usually measured in seconds (m/s2), you can measure it in hours or minutes, but those units of time must be translated into seconds, ie: The turtle has an acceleration of 45meters/70minutes ; 60 seconds in one minute, 60 x 70 = 4200 seconds = 45metes/4200 seconds. Therefore the turtle can travel 45 meters every 4200 seconds.
time! (hours, minutes, years, months, days, seconds, milliseconds)
Degrees, Minutes and Seconds of arc. Same as longitude.
In the International System of Units (SI Units), time is measured in seconds.
9 hours 21 minutes 09 seconds - 3 hours 46 minutes 54 seconds =5 hours 34 minutes 15 seconds
(11 hours 25 minutes 20 seconds) + (4 hours 5 minutes 35 seconds) = 15 hours 31 seconds.
34281 seconds = 9 hours 31 minutes and 21 seconds.