A broad band along the equator is usually the hottest area of the earth throughout the year.
Earth's average distance from the Sun is about 93 million miles, or 150 million kilometers. This distance can vary slightly throughout the year due to the elliptical shape of Earth's orbit around the Sun.
The Earth's path around the sun follows a slightly elliptical orbit rather than a perfect circle. This means that its distance from the sun can vary slightly throughout the year, but it always follows a predictable and consistent pattern.
No. The distance to the sun is approximately 1 AU. However, our actual distance to the sun varies by about 2% throughout the year.
The orbit of the Earth around the Sun is an elliptical orbit. It is not a perfect circle but rather an elongated circle with the Sun slightly off-center. This means that the distance between the Earth and the Sun varies throughout the year.
yes
Yes. We could write a lot more, but yes is the answer.
Yes/more at the north/south hemisphere zones but almost constant at the equator.
Yes/more at the north/south hemisphere zones but almost constant at the equator.
A broad band along the equator is usually the hottest area of the earth throughout the year.
A broad band along the equator is usually the hottest area of the earth throughout the year.
Earth's average distance from the Sun is about 93 million miles, or 150 million kilometers. This distance can vary slightly throughout the year due to the elliptical shape of Earth's orbit around the Sun.
There is a change in the amount of energy from the sun reaching the earth due to the elliptical nature of earths orbit around the sun, but the limits of this change are small compared to the effect of the tilt of the earths axis, and its tendency to remain parrallel throughout its orbit of the sun. For evidence, the fact that the northern and southern hemispheres have summer and winter at opposite times of the year from each other despite being exactly the same distance from the sun should be pretty convincing.
beacuse of the earths rotation
There would be no seasons on Earth if the Earth's axis had no tilt because throughout the year the Earth would get an equal amount of sun everywhere.
Earth's eccentricity Eccentricity is defined as the difference in shape between an ellipse and a perfect circle. In a similar fashion to Earth's obliquity, the more uniform Earth's orbit is (more like a perfect circle), the less difference there is in climate change throughout the year.
=What are the positions of the sun over a year???=