No.
If the sun burned out all life on Earth would cease to exist. There would be no heat.
No, all parts of the Earth are not heated evenly. The distribution of heat on Earth's surface is influenced by factors such as sunlight intensity, the angle of sunlight, atmospheric circulation patterns, and ocean currents. This leads to variations in temperature across different regions of the world.
Of course sunlight doesn't hit the earth's surface evenly! Countries on the equator or near it receive the most direct sunlight. And of course countries in the artic circle have hardly any! [^-^]
The sun's energy. The sun does not heat all surfaces of the earth evenly the differences of temperature between the tropics, poles, land, sea cause air movement - wind
The surface of the earth holds heat, and the greenhouse gases in the atmosphere hold heat all through the night. If the earth had no atmosphere, then at night all the heat would escape out to space and the earth would be freezing.
The form of energy where heat moves out evenly in all directions from a source hope that helped :)
Heat from the sun, movement of the sea and the rotation of the earth all play a part in generating our weather.
There are several reasons why the Earth does not have a uniform temperature at all points on the globe and it is almost entirely a consequence of uneven heating by the Sun and the way that heat energy is distributed once it arrives.The earth is round, which means that near the equator the rays are striking almost perpendicularly while at the poles the rays reach the surface at an almost flat angle. The flatter angle makes the radiation less intense.Not all light that strikes the Earth is absorbed. There is a portion that is reflected and that varies depending on the type of covering on the Earth. (This fraction of light reflected is called the albedo.) Oceans and land and forests and snow all have a different albedo.The distribution of heat around the globe is determined by a complex weather process that depends on the distribution of landmasses and oceans. The movement of air and water is further affected by Earth's rotation.Seasons are a result of the tilt of Earth's axis relative to the plane it orbits the sun in. As a result, the Northern Hemisphere has winter when the North pole is tilted away from the sun, and some parts won't even get any sunlight for a couple of months.Some of the effect, such as the ocean and wind currents, tend to distribute heat more evenly, for instance from the equator towards the poles. Other effects, such as albedo cause less sunlight to be absorbed by snow and so colder regions tend to stay colder. The variety that exists is actually beneficial to life on Earth.
no
It is heat from the sun that causes water to evaporate. Without the sun all water on Earth would freeze.
all of it.
No. The sun radiates heat in all directions on 3 axes. The spherical arc of that which reaches the Earth's Atmosphere is very small in comparison.