If Earth were not rotating, how would the path of a satellite traveling from north to south around Earth be observed from the surface

What will be the ideal response?


ANSWER: If Earth were not rotating, the path of the satellite would be observed to move directly from north to south, parallel to Earth’s meridian lines. However, Earth does rotate, carrying us and meridians eastward with it. Because of this rotation in the Northern Hemisphere, we see the satellite moving southwest instead of due south; it seems to veer off its path and move toward its right. In the Southern Hemisphere, Earth’s direction of rotation is clockwise as viewed from above the South Pole. Consequently, a satellite moving northward from the South Pole would appear to move northwest and, hence, would veer to the left of its path.

Environmental & Atmospheric Sciences

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These lines run east-west around the globe and are used to locate places north and south of the equator

A) meridians and longitude B) meridians C) longitude D) Prime Meridians E) parallels

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Why is the Intermontane West referred to as a land of discontinuous settlement as compared to the early patterns of Euro-American and Euro-Canadian settlement in the eastern United States and Canada?

What will be an ideal response?

Environmental & Atmospheric Sciences

A reverse fault is one in which ________.

a.) one block has moved downward and the other moved horizontally along a vertical fault b.) both blocks have moved horizontally in opposite directions along an inclined fault c.) the hanging wall block has moved up relative to the footwall block along an inclined fault. d.) the block above the fault plane has moved backwards with respect to the other block

Environmental & Atmospheric Sciences

Migration from rural to urban areas began in the 1800s in Europe and North America as part of the ________

A) Civil war B) Industrial Revolution C) Deforestation D) Agricultural Revolution E) None of these answer choices are correct.

Environmental & Atmospheric Sciences