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Some people think that the seasons are caused by Earth being close to the Sun in summer and far away from the Sun in winter.

Actually, the seasons are caused by the TILT of Earth's AXIS, which is an imaginary line, that extends vertically from the North Pole, through this planet, and comes out to the South pole. It is tilted at 23.5° from it's perpendicular to it's orbital plane. When the Earth is on a particular side of the Sun, one hemisphere receives more direct Solar radiation then the other, that is while we have winter, and celebrate Christmas in the cold, Australians are surfing and celebrate St. Nick's day in the heat. Six months later when the Earth's position is on the opposite side of the sun, then the Northern Hemisphere receives more direct the solar radiation making for longer days and shorter nights and this is also the reason the Sun looms higher in the sky.
The Earth's axis is tilted from perpendicular to the plane of the ecliptic by 23.45°. This tilting is what gives us the four seasons of the year - spring, summer, autumn (fall) and winter. Since the axis is tilted, different parts of the globe are oriented towards the Sun at different times of the year.

Summer is warmer than winter (in each hemisphere) because the Sun's rays hit the Earth at a more direct angle during summer than during winter and also because the days are much longer than the nights during the summer. During the winter, the Sun's rays hit the Earth at an extreme angle, and the days are very short. These effects are due to the tilt of the Earth's axis.
The changing distance of Earth from the Sun has little effect on what we refer to as seasons. It is instead the tilt of the planet's axis compared to the flat plane of its orbit.

The Earth spins about its axis at a fixed angle to the plane of its orbit. Depending on the planet's orbital position, either northern or southern latitudes can receive both longer hours of daylight and more direct radiation (i.e. at an angle to the atmosphere closer to perpendicular).

Twice during the year (spring and fall), the Sun appears to circle more directly over the equator, and all areas receive similar amounts of sunlight. From late December to late March, the Southern Hemisphere experiences summer while the Northern Hemisphere experiences winter. From late June to late September, the position is the other extreme, and it is summer in the Northern Hemisphere, winter in the southern.

(see related question)
Because the Earth tilts on its axis, in the winter (late December through early March) the northern hemisphere tilts away from the sun and receives less sunlight, and is therefore colder than it is at other times of the year, while the southern hemisphere tilts toward the sun and receives more sunlight and is warmer that it is at other times of the year; in the summer, it is the northern hemisphere that tilts toward the sun and the southern hemisphere that tilts away from the sun. That is why there are seasons. With no axial tilt, the Earth would have exactly the same climate all the time. Polar regions would still be colder than equatorial regions, but whatever the climate was, there would be no seasonal changes.
When looking at the Earth and Sun from space, suppose you see the Earth on the left side of the Sun, and that it's also tilted so that the top of the planet is further away from the Sun than the bottom, so the axis looks like this (Earth is on the left):

(\) (Sun)

It is not the distance that is important, the difference in distance is insignificant overall. It is the ANGLE at which the sunlight strikes the portion of the earth. This is also why the Sun appears lower in the sky, and why the day is shorter

Now, it's important that the tilt doesn't change. Half a year later, Earth will travel halfway around the sun so that it now appears to the right from your viewing position. Because the tilt is still to the left,

(Sun) (\)

Now the days are longer because the northern hemisphere so it receives radiation more nearly perpendicular and it's warmer. The southern hemisphere now has winter because the radiation is less perpendicular.

You can see a similar effect when you shine a torch (flashlight) at a wall. If you hold it horizontal so the light strikes at right angles all areas receive the same amount of light. Now tilt the torch and you will see the shape of the beam striking the wall change. This is exactly what happens due to the tilt of the earth.

At any given time, the hemisphere adjacent to the pole tilted toward the sun is the one that experiences spring and summer, whereas the one adjacent to the pole tilted away from the sun is the hemisphere experiencing autumn and winter.
Because without them we wouldn't have spring, winter, and fall. It would be summer all the time day in and day out.
The earth has a big, imaginary bar through the north pole to its center to the south pole, called an axis. This axis, during different seasons, tilts either toward or away from the sun. When the northern half of the axis is tilting towards the sun, the northern portion of the earth is closer to the sun, and is therefore hotter, and since the south is farther, it is cooler. So, when it is hottest in the north, it is coldest in the south. It works in the other direction, too. When the north is away from the sun, it is cold in the north and warm in the south (winter in the north, summer in the south). It is for this same reason that the temperatures of the equator are fairly constant and nonseasonal. Because they are the center of the earth, their distance from the sun is almost always the same.

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8y ago
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9y ago

Because it revolves around the Sun just like other planets or moons. The phases of the Earth as seen from the Moon would be roughly the reverse of the concurrent phases of the Moon, except that Earth never leaves the sky for locations on the "front side" of the Moon, and is never seen from almost all of the far side of the Moon.

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11y ago

The seasons we experience on Earth, where we see more daylight in the summer and less in the winter, come about due to the tilt in the earths axis. This tilt of 23.5° to the horizontal means that during its progression around the sun in one year, the northern hemisphere will `lean` towards the sun more at one part of the cycle, giving rise to summer months for the northern hemisphere and winter months for the southern hemisphere. Six months later, with the earth on the other side of the sun, the tilt means that the northern hemisphere is less exposed to the sun, tilting away from it. This gives winter for the northern hemisphere and summer for the summer hemisphere.

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7y ago

The earth has seasons because it leans on its axis
The Earth tilts on its axis as it rotates while orbiting the Sun. It is this tilting that causes the Sun's ray to strike the Earth at a direct angle, causing summer, or at a slant, causing winter.
The earth haas an axial tilt of about 23.5° this causes the seasons. The longer amounts of sunlight, and more direct sunlight causes more warmth and visa-versa for less of each. There are some places on planet earth where the highest temperature and lowest temperature in a climatological year exceeds 150 degrees.

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12y ago

yes, when the earth tilts, the sun is pointed towards a different side of the earth, making it warmer on one side than the other

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14y ago

The TILT of its AXIS is what provides the change of seasons.

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16y ago

The months make up a mostly even division of the 365 days it takes the earth to go around the sun in one year They also seem to represent the four seasons

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11y ago

The earth tilts on an axis and the sun moves around it so the further the sun is and the closer, the seasons change

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13y ago

The tilt on Earth causes it. The orbiting around the sun makes it happen.

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11y ago

A tilted axis

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Q: Property of earth that causes seasons?
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