No - they are equal, depending on solar activity.
The only difference between LED lights and normal lights is that LED lights are much brighter and are a brighter white than normal lights. Some find the brighter lights better, while others find the lights too bright.
For the most part there is less developed land in the Southern Hemisphere than in the Northern Hemisphere. That means that at night when you can see the stars there is less light pollution, and generally, I believe. less air pollution. Less air pollution means less tiny particles in the air. Particles tend to interfere with the passage of light, so you can't see stars that give off less light. At the same time "Light Pollution" makes the sky seem lighter providing poorer contrast and making weaker stars more difficult to see. In other words, stars are not brighter in the Southern Hemisphere, they're just easier to see.
No. Northern parts aren't colder than the southern parts.
No. Northern parts aren't colder than the southern parts.
It is warmer In Southern Sweden than it is in Northern Sweden
In Argentina, you closer to northern than to Spain in southern.
Parallel connections will draw more current than equivalent lights connected in series, so the parallel configuration will be brighter.
The Southern Hemisphere contains the most water
The northern coast is colder than southern coast.
The closer streetlights appear brighter than the more distant lights due to the concept of perspective. As objects move farther away, they appear smaller and less intense to our eyes. This change in size and intensity gives the illusion that closer streetlights are brighter.
Because you compare them to the brightness of the surroundings.
northern