23.5 degrees. That's the angle between the axis of the Earth and a line that is perpendicular to the plane of Earth's orbit around the Sun.
The Earth's axis is tilted by about 23.5 degrees (more exactly 23 degrees, 26 minutes, 21.4119 seconds) with respect to the perpendicular to the plane of its orbit (the plane of the ecliptic)
Approximately 23°. As a matter of interest, the Tropics of Cancer and capricorn are 23° from the Equator, these representing the most northerly/southerly points on the Earth where the Sun can be directly overhead. This is due to that tilt of the earth.
Essentially "zero"; even the 100x more powerful Chile earthquake had only a very tiny effect.
The tilt of the earths axis is constant throughout the year at about 23.5 degrees
In relationship to its plane of orbit around the sun, the planet Mercury's axis is virtually perpendicular. However, it has been determined that its axis is very, very slightly tilted from the perpendicular, by about 2.11′ ± 0.1′i.e. 2.11 minutes, plus or minus 0.1 of a minute.(A 'minute' in this context of angular measurement is one 60th of a a degree)See Related links for details.
The earth is always tilted on its axis. It is about 23.5o
The earth is tilted 23.5 degrees
The Earth's axis is tilted by about 23.5 degrees (more exactly 23 degrees, 26 minutes, 21.4119 seconds) with respect to the perpendicular to the plane of its orbit (the plane of the ecliptic)
If you are talking about the Earth than it is 23.5 degrees on its tilt.
23.5 degrees.
23.5 degrees
The earth's axis is tilted to 23.48 degrees to the ecliptic plane
About 23.5 degrees, but it wobbles around this angle (between 22.1 and 24.5 degrees).
Approximately 23°. As a matter of interest, the Tropics of Cancer and capricorn are 23° from the Equator, these representing the most northerly/southerly points on the Earth where the Sun can be directly overhead. This is due to that tilt of the earth.
23.5 degrees
Essentially "zero"; even the 100x more powerful Chile earthquake had only a very tiny effect.
23.5 degrees