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horizons

Horizons are the apparent boundary between the earth and the sky as viewed from a location. In everyday use, a horizon is what you see when you look toward the distant sea, land, or flat terrain; it seems to separate ground from sky.

Geometrically, the horizon is the circle where the tangent plane to the Earth's surface at the observer

Two common senses of horizon exist: the geographic (or ground) horizon, which is the boundary formed by

Horizons are important in navigation, surveying, and astronomy, where they help determine position, time, and visibility

intersects
the
sky.
Its
position
depends
on
the
observer’s
height
above
the
surface
and
the
curvature
of
the
Earth.
Because
the
atmosphere
refracts
light
and
because
the
terrain
may
rise
above
sea
level,
the
horizon
you
actually
see—the
apparent
horizon—can
differ
from
this
geometric
line.
the
visible
surface
of
the
Earth
meeting
the
sky,
and
the
celestial
horizon,
defined
as
the
intersection
of
the
celestial
sphere
with
the
local
horizontal
plane.
The
celestial
horizon
is
used
to
measure
altitude
(angle
above
the
horizon)
and
to
set
the
observer’s
azimuth
(direction
along
the
horizon).
conditions.
In
photography
and
art,
the
horizon
line
helps
structure
composition.
Culturally,
horizons
function
as
metaphors
for
limits
of
knowledge,
future
prospects,
and
exploration.