6th Graders Questions
Simple Answer: The areas near the equator heat up more than other regions because Sun's rays strike Earth at a higher angle near the equator than the North Pole, South Pole, and other more regions.
By: Rocio Rodriguez, 6th grader.
Areas near the equator are typically wet because of the high levels of solar radiation. The intense heat causes the air to rise, forming clouds and resulting in frequent rainfall. Additionally, the warm ocean waters near the equator contribute to the high humidity and precipitation in these regions.
Tropical areas near the equator have the warmest climate because the sun's rays are pointed at the middle of the Earth on its axis, called the equator. The directness of the sun's rays obviously causes heat which is why the places around the Earth's equator are warm. :-)
Areas close to the Earth's equator tend to be warmer than areas farther away from the equator primarily because sunlight is more direct at the equator. The sun's rays hit the Earth's surface at a higher angle near the equator, resulting in more concentrated energy and heat. In contrast, areas farther from the equator receive sunlight at lower angles, causing the energy to be spread out over a larger area and resulting in cooler temperatures.
The Tropic of Cancer is north of the Equator, while the Tropic of Capricorn is south of the Equator. As both are near the Equator, I would say they were warm. But, usually, without cloud cover to trap and keep in the day's heat, the night could prove to be very cold, as the day's heat escapes into the night sky.
Because the sun's ray's hits directly to the equator and on a slope to the polar regions providing less heat intensity to those latitudes.
Areas near the equator are typically wet because of the high levels of solar radiation. The intense heat causes the air to rise, forming clouds and resulting in frequent rainfall. Additionally, the warm ocean waters near the equator contribute to the high humidity and precipitation in these regions.
Around the Equator
The equator faces the sun more directly than the polar regions do, and therefore gets more sunlight and more resulting heat.
The direction that heat flows in is From a warmer object to a cooler object.
The equator itself does not give off heat. However, because the equator receives more direct sunlight than other parts of the Earth, it tends to be warmer due to the sun's energy.
The equator is probably the best region. Water takes a long time to absorb heat but retains it longer and the place that gets the longest exposure to the heat source (sun) is the equator.
As warm water flows toward the poles, away from the equator, it loses its heat slowly to the air above it. Winds, in turn, transfer this heat to areas over which these winds blow. As a result, areas in northern latitudes may have warmer temperatures and milder winters than would be expected in those areas.
Tropical areas near the equator have the warmest climate because the sun's rays are pointed at the middle of the Earth on its axis, called the equator. The directness of the sun's rays obviously causes heat which is why the places around the Earth's equator are warm. :-)
because the latitude of a place is mainly responsible for the amount of heat it gets. the direct rays of the sun strike the areas near the equator
Areas close to the Earth's equator tend to be warmer than areas farther away from the equator primarily because sunlight is more direct at the equator. The sun's rays hit the Earth's surface at a higher angle near the equator, resulting in more concentrated energy and heat. In contrast, areas farther from the equator receive sunlight at lower angles, causing the energy to be spread out over a larger area and resulting in cooler temperatures.
The Tropic of Cancer is north of the Equator, while the Tropic of Capricorn is south of the Equator. As both are near the Equator, I would say they were warm. But, usually, without cloud cover to trap and keep in the day's heat, the night could prove to be very cold, as the day's heat escapes into the night sky.
Heat always moves from warmer areas or sites to cooler areas or sites. Hence body heat moves from the cells to the blood. From the blood to the lungs or from the skin to the air. Once in the air it moves to cooler regions of air.