No. In the summer, the hemisphere you are in is tilted toward the sun. As a result, the sun's rays strike the surface at a steeper angle and the energy is less spread out than in other seasons, so there is more solar energy delivered to an area of a given size.
The Hemisphere leaning towards the sun is always in summer, and generally has hotter temperatures.
No. Summer days are longer - if you're some distance away from the equator - because the Earth is slightly tilted on its axis. This influences how long the Sun will remain over the horizon.
No, the sun does not give off more heat in the summer. It only seems hotter because the axis of the Earth, that you are on, is now pointed closer to the sun, where as in winter you are actually farther from the sun, since the axis is pointed in the other direction, and therefore you do not experience the same warmth as in summer.
of course not, Mars is colder than Earth, The Sun is a furnace a hydrogen fuel
The core of the sun
Sun does not get hotter in summer season .
It is hotter in the summer because of the tilt of the Earth on it's axis. The sun is further away but the rays are more direct.
because the earht spins on its axis
The Hemisphere leaning towards the sun is always in summer, and generally has hotter temperatures.
If it is tilting towards the sun, then it is going to be hotter, therefore it's summer
Because the sun is closer to the earth during summer - making the overall temperature warmer !
why the sun is higher in summer is because the earths top of the axis is pointed to the sun which makes this hotter and in winter the axis is pointed away from the sun which makes it colder
cause summer has the sun rays more than the winter so it's hotter
I'm not sure, but I think it's because the sun stays out longer.
Becaus that is when the sun is hitting North America at a certain area where it makes it hotter
when its summer on earth it doesn't look like nothing but the sun goes hotter and its coming closer to earth.
I think so because Tehran is more nearby by sun