Arctic Circle

noun
1.
an imaginary line drawn parallel to the equator, at 23°28prime; S of the North Pole: between the North Frigid Zone and the North Temperate Zone.
British Dictionary definitions for Arctic Circle

Arctic Circle

noun
1.
the imaginary circle round the earth, parallel to the equator, at latitude 66° 32′ N; it marks the northernmost point at which the sun appears above the level of the horizon on the winter solstice
Word Origin and History for Arctic Circle

1550s, in reference to a celestial circle, a line around the sky which, in any location, bounds the stars which are ever-visible from that latitude (in the Northern Hemisphere, this is focused on the celestial north pole); the concept goes back to the ancient Greeks, for whom this set of constellations included most prominently the two bears (arktoi), hence the name for the circle (see arctic). Of Earth, the circle 66 degrees 32 minutes north of the equator, marking the southern extremity of the polar day, it is recorded from 1620s.

Arctic Circle in Science
Arctic Circle
  (ärk'tĭk)   
The parallel of latitude approximately 66°33' north. It forms the boundary between the North Temperate and North Frigid zones.
Arctic Circle in Culture

Arctic Circle definition


Imaginary circle around the Earth about three-quarters of the way from the equator to the North Pole. North of this line is the “Land of the Midnight Sun,” where the sun never sets on the summer solstice.

Note: The Arctic Circle corresponds to the Antarctic Circle in the Southern Hemisphere.