No, but the fact that the Earth orbits the Sun does do that.
Because of the way sunlight ins scattered through our atmosphere (and because the Sun is incredibly bright), we cannot see stars that appear near the Sun in the sky; the Sun has to go below the horizon for any stars to be visible. Stars that are near the Sun in the sky are not visible.
So as the Earth goes around the Sun, a different set of stars appear to be "behind" the Sun, near it in the sky, each season.
None.Jupiter does not have seasons as easons are caused by a tilted axis, and Jupiter's axis is only tilted 3 degrees (not enough to cause seasons).
does it cause day and night or seasons
Because of the angle of Earth on it's axis
That would most likely cause a very small change in the seasons.
The tilt makes all of the seasons change! What grade are you in,anyways!
the way earth has a tilted axis
The change in seasons
The seasons are cause by the tilt of the axis of the Earth. The rotation about axis itself moves very little
The change in seasons
does it cause day and night or seasons
None.Jupiter does not have seasons as easons are caused by a tilted axis, and Jupiter's axis is only tilted 3 degrees (not enough to cause seasons).
The tilting of the Earth on its axis exposes the planet to different levels of sunlight, this in turn causes temperature variations and results in what is known as seasons.
does it cause day and night or seasons
Because the Earth tilts slightly away from the sun and then back, an North or S hemisphere gets warmer or cooler resulting in the different seasons.
It is the tilting of the Earth on its axis that causes the seasons, not the distance from the Sun.
It is the tilting of the Earth on its axis that causes the seasons, not the distance from the Sun.
If the Earth's axis were not tilted relative to the plane of the ecliptic, we would not have any "seasons" at all.