sweetpea wrote:senorpepr wrote:clfenwi wrote:sweetpea wrote:I am not sure if I am asking this in the right place and I am sorry for the ignorant question. How many NM are there between points? Like 74 W and 75 West? Is it the same North? Thanks for any responses.
Debbie
Depends on where the points are relative to the equator.
At the equator, it is the same as latitude: 1° = 60 nm.
However, as you head north or south from the equator, the distance shrinks.
The conversion factor is the cosine of the latitude. For example, for 20° latitude , cos(20) ~= .9397 .9397* 60 = 56.3 . So at 20° latitude 1 ° longitude = 56.3 nm ...
For the tropics, the conversion factor doesn't take much off, so 60 nautical miles is a reasonable approximation if you don't have a calculator or trig table handy. However, as you head further north or south from the equator, the differences become significant.
hope this helps...
Wow... I knew the day that people started using cosine in their post was going to be a strange day indeed.

OK my next question. What is cosine? I tried to look in a weather glossary before I asked and couldn't find it.
I just realized it wouldn't be in a weather glossary but it is more of a mathematical term, right?
Debbie
Yep, it's a math term, from trigonometry, specifically. For this particular purpose, there's no need to go into the gory details.
To find the conversion factor that I mentioned in my original post, go here:
http://www.industrialpress.com/Trig.htm
and go down the first column until you find the latitude you want the conversion factor for. The second column (labeled) is the conversion factor for that latitude. Take that number, multiply it by 60, and you have the number of nautical miles in 1° of longitude at the particular latitude.
Like I said earlier, (and as gkrangers noted) 60 nautical miles is a good approximation, especially for low latitudes (i.e. the Tropics).
However, my father was among other things, a navigator. He would not be happy with me just saying 'oh yeah, it's 60 nautical miles'.