Yes, in terms of the intensity, they receive the most. Throughout the year the sun shines most directly, on average, on regions near the equator.
tropical regions
Because In December the north pole points away from the sun and does not receive any sunlight
Solar radiation is most intense at noon.
The thermosphere is heated by solar radiation particularly in the far ultraviolet range; much of this is filtered out by the atmosphere's lower layers - but in the these upper regions it is more exposed to this kind of radiation.
Ultraviolet radiation
tropical regions
Solar radiation.
polar regions are in areas surrounded by poles or frigid zones, climate in these areas are cooler as they receive far less intensity from solar radiation, tropical regions are closer to the equator of the earth and therefore the climate in these areas are warmer
The polar regions will receive less radiation. The amount of solar radiation that impacts a particular area of the Earth is proportional to the cosine of the angle between the normal of the surface area and the incoming "ray" of radiation. So if the axial tilt was 0 then the angle of the solar radiation would be 90 degrees, the cosine of 90 is 0. At 10 degree tilt there will be an increase of ice, snow and glaciation due less solar radiation in summer.
All regions near the equator receive about the same amount of solar energy but the Atacama desert gets the most.
ur face
Most deserts receive much solar radiation - sunlight.
it gets 1,000,000 watts of solar energy per minute.
It may be called by different names, for example:* Solar energy * Solar radiation * Electromagnetic waves * Light (actually this is only part of the radiation we receive)
It may be called by different names, for example:* Solar energy * Solar radiation * Electromagnetic waves * Light (actually this is only part of the radiation we receive)
It may be called by different names, for example:* Solar energy * Solar radiation * Electromagnetic waves * Light (actually this is only part of the radiation we receive)
Temperate, Tropical, and Polar are the three major climate zones. They differ because they each get different amounts of solar radiation. Tropical gets the most solar radiation, then Temperate, and polar gets the least.