There are a number of pairs of cities at the same longitude. For example, San Francisco and Redding, CA. Adelaide, Australia, and Nagano, Japan. Shanghai, China, Taipei, Taiwan, and Manila, Philippines.
That's like asking "Who are the two people whose names are spelled the same?"
Each latitude is a circle that goes all the way around the earth and has billions or
trillions of points on it. And there are billions or trillions of different latitudes.
The intersection of Michigan Ave. and Randolph St. in downtown Chicago is at the
same latitude as the Circo Massimo in Rome. And my home in Skokie Illinois is at
the same latitude as the Hokkaido-Komagatake volcano in Japan. There are a
jillion bazillion other pairs like this on earth.
Whatever longitude you decide to choose, it represents a line between the north
and south poles that's more than 12,000 miles long. Some of them are mostly over
water, but others are mostly over land, and traverse literally hundreds if not thousands
of cities, towns, and villages all on the same longitude.
The question is a lot like asking "What two people in the USA have the same height ?"
It's possible to define an infinite number of latitudes on Earth, and you're asking me
to examine every one of them, to find one that happens to cross two cities.
One good, correct answer to this question is: San Francisco CA and Beckley WV.
Another one is Washington DC and Colorado Springs CO.
Another one is Madrid, Spain and Pittsburgh PA.
Another one is Ramat Gan, Israel and Nanjing, China.
I'm guessing that there are at least 1,000 more.
Latitude is the distance from the North or South Pole. A line of latitude goes all the way around the earth, and any place that is due east or due west of you is at the same latitude.
If you spend some time with a globe, a book of maps, or a mapping softwarepackage, you'll find loads of cities and towns that are all on almost any latitudeyou choose, and tons of them that are all on almost any longitude you choose.But . . .A pair of latitude / longitude numbers describes a single point on the Earth. Soit's not possible for two different points to have the same latitude and longitude.
No two points on Earth ... even the places where your two feet are standing ... can have the same latitude and longitude.
Cities on approximately the same latitude would be: Seattle and Paris. To find cities on the same latitude, simply locate one city, then follow that latitude line eastwards or westwards until you encounter another city. Traveling northwards or southwards will change your latitude location.Several cities fall on the same latitude. One example is 40 degrees North. Cities that fall on this latitude include Columbus, Philadelphia, Beijing, Reno, Valencia, Palermo and Athens.
No. Solar Noon is dependent on longitude. So if two places experience solar noon (also called Local Apparent Noon) at the same time, they are at the same longitude. If "they" also have the same latitude, then it's only one place. So two different places at the same latitude cannot have the same longitude, so they won't have LAN at the same time.
Longitude.
Cardiff and Auckland
England and Venice
If you spend some time with a globe, a book of maps, or a mapping softwarepackage, you'll find loads of cities and towns that are all on almost any latitudeyou choose, and tons of them that are all on almost any longitude you choose.But . . .A pair of latitude / longitude numbers describes a single point on the Earth. Soit's not possible for two different points to have the same latitude and longitude.
No two points on Earth ... even the places where your two feet are standing ... can have the same latitude and longitude.
Cities on approximately the same latitude would be: Seattle and Paris. To find cities on the same latitude, simply locate one city, then follow that latitude line eastwards or westwards until you encounter another city. Traveling northwards or southwards will change your latitude location.Several cities fall on the same latitude. One example is 40 degrees North. Cities that fall on this latitude include Columbus, Philadelphia, Beijing, Reno, Valencia, Palermo and Athens.
Every point on Earth has a latitude and a longitude. No two points have the same set of two numbers.
Not necessarily. In fact, not even cities at the same longitude always have the same time; some time zone boundaries wander across the map, based more on political than physical considerations.
No. Solar Noon is dependent on longitude. So if two places experience solar noon (also called Local Apparent Noon) at the same time, they are at the same longitude. If "they" also have the same latitude, then it's only one place. So two different places at the same latitude cannot have the same longitude, so they won't have LAN at the same time.
Longitude.
The cities that are on maps
There is generally no time distinction between two latitudes along the same line of longitude since a whole line of longitude "faces" the sun at the same time.
yes