# What is the name of the top of a hemisphere?

I need to refer to the "top" of a hemisphere - the "highest point" on a hemisphere. I am thinking it must be called the "apex" of the hemisphere, but I am not sure.

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North pole?${}$ –  David Mitra Jul 29 '12 at 2:08
Agreed, David. It is picturesque and entirely accurate. –  ncmathsadist Jul 29 '12 at 2:11
I asked an Australian once if they orient their globes with the South Pole uppermost, but he said no, they orient them the same way that everyone else does. –  MJD Jul 29 '12 at 3:11
Just plain "pole" ought to be fine... –  Guess who it is. Jul 29 '12 at 3:31
il colmo dellagran secca books.google.ca/… –  Michael Jul 29 '12 at 3:47

The term Chebyshev center is well established, despite the confusing "alternative" definition in the first paragraph of the article. A Chebyshev center of a set $A$ in metric space $X$ is a point $c\in X$ (which may or may not be unique) which minimizes $\sup_{a\in A} d(a,c)$. If $X$ is a hemisphere with either extrinsic (chordal) or intrinsic (Riemannian) metric, the Chebyshev center of $X$ is the point you want to describe. This description is less intuitive than North Pole, but is invariant under rigid motions.