No. Due to the elipitcal shape of its orbit, Earth's distance from the sun varies regularly by about 2 million miles. In fact, Earth is farthest from the sun in early July, which is summer for the northern hemisphere. If Earth got too far away it would freeze, but we have quite a bit of leeway.
The farther the sun gets away from the earth, the colder it is, that is WInter and Fall. The closer it gets the warmer it gets. That is Spring and Summer.
If the Earth moves further away from the sun we will freeze.
there are so many seasons because as the earth gets closer to the sun, the temperature changes as it gets warmer, but when the earth get farther away from the sun, the temperature starts to change as it gets colder.
The earth revolves around the sun, as it gets farther away, it becomes winter and closer summer.
The farther the sun gets away from the earth, the colder it is, that is WInter and Fall. The closer it gets the warmer it gets. That is Spring and Summer.
As a person moves farther away from Earth, the force of gravity acting on them decreases. This is because gravitational force is inversely proportional to the square of the distance from the center of the Earth. Therefore, as the distance increases, the gravitational pull weakens, resulting in a lower weight for the person the farther they are from the planet.
Flooding
as you get closer it gets warmer and as you go farther away it gets colder
Gravity is governed by an "inverse square" relationship. This means gravity gets exponentially weaker the farther away you get. If I am 4 miles away from the center of the Earth, I will experience 1/16th the gravity that someone 1 mile away will experience. I am 4x farther away, but I get 16x less gravity.
It popes
the weight decreases and mass stays the same
The farther from the equator, the weaker the sunlight gets.