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breedtegraden

Breedtegraden, in geography, refer to latitude degrees that measure how far north or south a point is from the equator. They form part of the geographic coordinate system used to specify positions on the Earth's surface, together with longitude (lengtegraden). Latitude values range from 0° at the equator to ±90° at the poles (90° north for the North Pole, 90° south for the South Pole). In practice, latitudes are commonly written with a hemisphere indicator (N or S) or as negative values for the southern hemisphere.

Latitude is defined by the angle between the equatorial plane and a line from the Earth's center

Latitude is used in navigation, mapping, weather forecasting, climate studies, and geographic information systems. It helps

to
a
point
on
the
surface,
measured
along
a
meridian.
The
distance
corresponding
to
one
degree
of
latitude
is
roughly
constant,
about
111.32
kilometers
(60
nautical
miles),
though
the
exact
length
varies
slightly
due
to
the
Earth’s
slightly
oblate
shape
(the
ellipsoid
used
as
a
reference).
Latitudinal
lines
are
imaginary
circles
that
run
east–west
around
the
globe
and
are
widest
at
the
equator,
shrinking
toward
the
poles.
determine
climate
zones,
daylight
variation,
and
solar
radiation
patterns.
Notable
latitudinal
markers
include
the
equator
(0°),
the
Tropics
of
Cancer
and
Capricorn
(approximately
±23.5°),
and
the
Arctic
and
Antarctic
Circles
(approximately
±66.5°).