Nothing happens
the angle Saturn is tilted on is 26.7 degrees. This is similar to the tilt of Earth, which is 23.4 degrees.
23.5 degrees
It is about 23.5 degrees
The angle between the orbital plane and equatorial plane of the earth (i.e., the angle of axial tilt) is about 23.4 degrees. This gives rise to the earth's seasons.
23.5 degrees from the perpendicular.
If the earth was not tilted at an angle of 23.5 degrees, there would not be the different seasons.
The angle between the orbit planes of the Earth and the Moon is known as the inclination. It is approximately 5.1 degrees.
No, but most do. The exceptions are Uranus and Venus. (They have axial tilts of about a right angle, and almost 180 degrees respectively.)
If you are talking about the Earth than it is 23.5 degrees on its tilt.
23.37 degrees Meaning that the Poles are tilted at 23.37 degrees to the angle at which the Sun's rays strike the Earth.
It probably wouldn't be habitable, if the Earth's axial "tilt" were 90 degrees.
The Earth's axial tilt is approximately 23.5 degrees, which means the angle of 11.5 degrees would not correspond directly to any significant astronomical feature.