This answer is defined by polar regions between 60 and 90 degrees of latitude. The southern polar region is included in the Antarctic region of the planet. Antarctica is a continent that makes up 10% of the Earth's surface. the northern polar region is located in the Arctic ocean, and it is surrounded by more land than you will find in the southern polar region.
Because the sun hits more directly at the equator. More sunlight is reflected off from the polar regions, and so less sunlight hits in the polar regions. NO! The sun's rays strike the polar regions at a lower angle, therefore delivering the same amount of energy, but spreading it over a greater area. This is what causes lower temperatures in the polar regions.
Well, they don't, actually. Hurricanes form in the more tropical regions, never the polar regions. Reason for that is basically there is more moisture in the atmosphere than in the polar regions. For a better explanation, please see the related question below.
The Equatorial regions reach more sun rays
The polar regions never receive any direct sunlight.
This answer is defined by polar regions between 60 and 90 degrees of latitude. The southern polar region is included in the Antarctic region of the planet. Antarctica is a continent that makes up 10% of the Earth's surface. the northern polar region is located in the Arctic ocean, and it is surrounded by more land than you will find in the southern polar region.
This answer is defined by polar regions between 60 and 90 degrees of latitude. The southern polar region is included in the Antarctic region of the planet. Antarctica is a continent that makes up 10% of the Earth's surface. the northern polar region is located in the Arctic ocean, and it is surrounded by more land than you will find in the southern polar region.
Because the sun hits more directly at the equator. More sunlight is reflected off from the polar regions, and so less sunlight hits in the polar regions. NO! The sun's rays strike the polar regions at a lower angle, therefore delivering the same amount of energy, but spreading it over a greater area. This is what causes lower temperatures in the polar regions.
Because the sun hits more directly at the equator. More sunlight is reflected off from the polar regions, and so less sunlight hits in the polar regions. NO! The sun's rays strike the polar regions at a lower angle, therefore delivering the same amount of energy, but spreading it over a greater area. This is what causes lower temperatures in the polar regions.
There is snow- and ice-covered land at the south pole. There is frozen ocean at the north pole.
Well, they don't, actually. Hurricanes form in the more tropical regions, never the polar regions. Reason for that is basically there is more moisture in the atmosphere than in the polar regions. For a better explanation, please see the related question below.
Tropical regions receive more hours of sunlight in a year compared to polar regions. This is because polar regions experience periods of continuous darkness in winter, known as polar night, while tropical regions generally have more consistent daylight throughout the year.
Glycerophospholipid is more soluble in water because it contains both polar and non polar regions, which allow them interact with polar and non polar substance. The ionized alcohol and phosphate portion is polar and strongly attracted to water.
The northern polar region contains more land compared to the southern polar region. This is because the Arctic region, located in the northern hemisphere, is mostly surrounded by landmasses while the Antarctic region in the southern hemisphere is mostly covered by ice with a continent beneath it.
The equator faces the sun more directly than the polar regions do, and therefore gets more sunlight and more resulting heat.
polar regions are snowy.tundra regions ar more solid ice. i think.DONT TAKE MY ADVICE!I REPEAT DONT TAKE MY ADVICE!i just guessed.sorry.
The Equatorial regions reach more sun rays