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Encyclopedia > Antipodal

Antipodal points on the surface of a sphere are diametrically opposite; on the other side of a globe. For example, "Norway and New Zealand lie in antipodal regions."


More generally, in mathematics, antipodal points on a sphere of any dimension are those opposite through the centre; for example, taking the centre as origin, they are points with related vectors v and −v. On a circle, such points are also called diametrically opposite. In other words, each line through the centre intersects the sphere in two points, one for each ray out from the centre. The Borsuk_Ulam theorem is a result from algebraic topology dealing with such pairs of points. If one wants to consider antipodal points as identified, one passes to projective space (see also projective Hilbert space, for this idea as applied in quantum mechanics).


The word Antipodes (pronounced an TIP uh deez) is also used in the Australia and New Zealand.


An antipodal point is sometimes called an antipode, a Greek plural whose singular is antipous.


The Greek expression means "opposite feet" or "opposing feet". When the Earth was thought to be flat, one theory held the some people lived on the opposite side from ours, and of course their feet pointed in the opposite direction from ours; their "down" was our "up". This caused great consternation in the church because there was the issue of whether Christ had saved these people as well. This idea is deeply explored Umberto Eco's brilliant Island of the Day Before as well as in Rennaissance encyclopedias.


The Antipodes Islands lie off the south coast of New Zealand, supposedly at the antipodal point to Great Britain. Their true antipodal point is near Cherbourg, France.




  Results from FactBites:
 
Antipodes - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1173 words)
In geography, the antipodes (from Greek anti- "opposed" and pous "foot") of any place on Earth is its antipodal point; that is, the region on the Earth's surface which is diametrically opposite to it.
The antipodes of any place on the Earth is the place which is diametrically opposite it — so situated that a line drawn from the one to the other passes through the centre of the Earth and forms a true diameter.
The antipodes of any place on Earth must be distant from it by 180° of longitude, and must be as many degrees to the north of the equator as the original is to the south; in other words, the latitudes are numerically equal, but one is north and the other south.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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