No.
no
no
yes
????? I'd call that IMPOSSIBLE. The only time there would be equal amounts of sun on all parts of the earth would be during a solar eclipse, at which time there would be no sunlight reaching anypart of the earth.
no, because diffefernt parts of the world receive different amounts of sunlight because the earth is tilted on it's axis.
The warmest parts. The parts along the equator.
give the pot a 1/4 turn every few days so different parts of the plant receive equal amounts of sunshine.
The "Tropics".
Different parts of the Earth get different amounts of solar(heat) energy.
If all parts of the earth received equal amounts of heat energy then the world would have the same climate regardless of the location. Climates are a direct result of sun exposure.
The equator divides the Earth into two equal parts, the northern and southern hemispheres. The prime meridian divides the Earth into the equal eastern and western hemispheres.
The equator.