What is Observer’s latitude?

Observer’s latitude is how far north or south someone is on Earth, like how high up a giant staircase they are.

Imagine Earth is a big round ball, and you're standing somewhere on it. If you’re at the North Pole, you're all the way at the top of the staircase. If you're at the equator, you're right in the middle, like halfway up. And if you're at the South Pole, you're all the way at the bottom.

Latitude is like a number that tells us how far from the equator someone is, kind of like steps on a staircase. Each step could be 1 degree, and there are 90 steps from the equator to each pole.

If you live in New York City, your latitude is around 40 degrees north, so you're about 40 steps up from the middle of the staircase.

If you lived at the North Pole, your latitude would be 90 degrees north, and if you were at the equator, it would be 0 degrees.

So, observer’s latitude is just a way to say how far north or south someone is on Earth, like counting steps on a giant staircase. Observer’s latitude is how far north or south someone is on Earth, like how high up a giant staircase they are.

Imagine Earth is a big round ball, and you're standing somewhere on it. If you’re at the North Pole, you're all the way at the top of the staircase. If you're at the equator, you're right in the middle, like halfway up. And if you're at the South Pole, you're all the way at the bottom.

Latitude is like a number that tells us how far from the equator someone is, kind of like steps on a staircase. Each step could be 1 degree, and there are 90 steps from the equator to each pole.

If you live in New York City, your latitude is around 40 degrees north, so you're about 40 steps up from the middle of the staircase.

If you lived at the North Pole, your latitude would be 90 degrees north, and if you were at the equator, it would be 0 degrees.

So, observer’s latitude is just a way to say how far north or south someone is on Earth, like counting steps on a giant staircase.

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Examples

  1. A person in New York sees the sun rise earlier than someone in London.
  2. Imagine standing on the equator and watching the stars move overhead.
  3. Someone near the North Pole might see the sun circle around them.

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