Yes.
No. What makes winter cold is the Earths tilt. The Earths "axial tilt" is 23.44 degrees. So, when it is winter, the tilt is away from the sun. when it is summer the tilt is facing the sun. when not facing the sun the tilt makes the days shorter, thus less sunlight and colder.
Earth would not have any extremely hot/cold weather conditions.
the earth gets hot in cold because of the earths tilt in the summer time most of the sun is on the earth in the winter time less of the sun is on the earth
earth can not tilt it is a sphere and they do not tilt
Earth's tilt
It's because of the tilt in the Earth's axis, causing the one pole at a time to point towards the Sun.
It gets dark then because of the tilt of the earth. Luckily, we were just talking about this in my science class. The earth has a tilt, and when it's winter time, we're at the bottom So imagine if this is the earth: /. And this is the sun: o. If the earth is like this: / o. Then the bottom of the earth isn't getting as much sunlight as the top of the earth. It all depends on the rotation and the tilt of the earth.
the tilt of the earth's axis is away from the sun that's it's cold!okay!
Now your question is wrong because the earths orbit doesn't contribute to the seasons, its the 23.5 degree tilt of the earth which creates the seasons. The tilt by what i believe was created when the moon was formed, or the godly way when god tilted the earth creating the flood
The Earth's tilt causes Earth's seasons. The Earth's orbit around the sun also affects the seasons. Landforms on Earth such as mountains play a part in the seasons as do the earth's oceans.
It gets cold when the sun is far away from our location like it is during the US winters due to the tilt of the earth.
A tiltmeter measures changes in the tilt of the earth. :)A tiltmeter is an instrument that measures changes in the tilt of the earth. :)