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We have seasons because Earth is tilted on its axis and it revolves around the sun. During May, June, and July, the northern hemisphere is exposed to more direct sunlight because the hemisphere faces the sun. The same is true of the Southern Hemisphere in November, December, and January. It is the tilt of the Earth that causes the Sun to be higher in the sky during the summer months.
basically because the sun is "tilted" away from the sun therefore we don't get much sunlight.
Yes. The change of the seasons occurs because the earth's axis of rotation is tilted slightly from its plane of rotation about the sun. Seasonal changes are not due to the eccentricity of the earth's orbit, which is slight. In fact, Earth is at aphelion, the point in its orbit where it is farthest from the sun, during the first half of July.
In short, because of the axial tilt of the earth. In May - July, the northern hemisphere is tilted more towards the sun and gets more sunlight at a more direct angle. The reverse is true for the southern hemisphere. In November - January, the situation is reversed; the southern hemisphere gets more direct sunlight.
Two continents that are completely tilted towards the sun in July
antarctica
The earth is tilted on its axis and revolves around the sun. In July the earth is tilted toward the sun so that the north pole stays in the sun all the time as the earth rotates. In the winter the earth is tilted away from sun and the north pole stays dark all the time.
No. In fact Earth is at its farthest point from the sun in early July and at its closest point in January. Earth's axis of rotation is tilted so relative to its orbit, so each hemisphere is alternately tilted toward and away from the sun. When the northern hemisphere is tilted toward the sun it experiences summer while the southern hemisphere, which is tilted away, experiences winter. When a hemisphere is tilted toward the sun, sunlight strikes the surface there at a steeper angle, so the sunlight is less spread out than it would be hitting at a shallow angle. The more concentrated sunlight results in greater heating.
June, July and August. When the Northern Hemisphere is tilted towards the sun and when the Southern Hemisphere is tilted away from the sun.
Tilted Straits - 2013 Backstabbing Doucheball 1-9 was released on: USA: 29 July 2013
Both hemispheres are the two halves of Earth. At different times each year, they are tilted towards the sun or tilted away from the sun, because of how the Earth rotates on its axis. For example, in July, in the northern hemisphere, it's summer, but in the southern hemisphere, it's winter. The northwern hemisphere is tilted towards the sun, and it gets more direct sunlight. The Southern Hemisphere is tilted away from the sun, and it gets a lot less direct sunlight.
the reason wh is because donkeys have big teeth therefore they leave an indent on the plate your're eating on....
July is the better month for skiing in Chile. South of the equator, the seasons are reversed. July and August are cold months and January and February at hot months. It has to do with the tilt of earth's axis. In the northern hemisphere, above the Tropic of Cancer, the earth is tilted towards the sun in July and August, making it summer. However, in the Southern Hemisphere, below the Tropic of Capricorn, the earth is tilted away from the sun in July and August, making those months wintertime - especially in places such as Chile and Argentina.
Winter. That's December and January for the northern hemisphere, and June-July for the southern hemisphere.
the northern hemisphere (the hot one)
July is the better month for skiing in Chile. South of the equator, the seasons are reversed. July and August are cold months and January and February at hot months. It has to do with the tilt of earth's axis. In the northern hemisphere, above the Tropic of Cancer, the earth is tilted towards the sun in July and August, making it summer. However, in the southern hemisphere, below the Tropic of Capricorn, the earth is tilted away from the sun in July and August, making those months wintertime - especially in places such as Chile and Argentina.