You would find the biggest change in temperature around the mid-Atlantic region of the US because Pennsylvania and new York and Maryland can rise over 100 degrees and even on some occasions drop to about 5 degrees.
Maybe no seasons or seasonal change
You can find the change in temperature by subtracting the initial temperature from the final temperature. For example, if the initial temperature is 20 degrees Celsius and the final temperature is 30 degrees Celsius, the change in temperature would be 10 degrees Celsius (30 - 20 = 10).
A 35-degree tilt in Earth's axis would likely result in more extreme seasonal temperature changes in New York State compared to the current 23.5-degree tilt. Winters may be colder and summers may be hotter, leading to more pronounced differences in temperature between the seasons.
The answer is variable.
Yes. That and the the fact that the earth revolves around the sun. Those two things. If the earth was not tilted with respect to its obit, there would be no seasonal change.
If Earth were not tilted on its axis, there would be no distinct seasons as we experience them today. Instead, each location would experience a more uniform climate year-round, with little variation in temperature or daylight hours. This lack of seasonal change would significantly impact ecosystems, agriculture, and the behavior of many species, including humans. Ultimately, the diversity of seasonal weather patterns that support various life forms would be greatly diminished.
how the temperature difference would change if st. louis were next to an ocean
temperature of the fluid.
If the earth was not tilted there would be little to no change in temperature, resulting in no seasons.
Environmental temperature change would effect everything from crop growth to hibernation. It would effect me as a homo sapien greatly as all of my crops would be dying - leaving me to starve - and the temperatures that I have adapted to would no longer be the ones I would be subjected to. This could potentially be lethal. Of course, the effects of environmental temperature change would vary depending on the scale of the change.
no se
That would be a solid. Solids expand and contract with temperature. The only thing that doesn't change with temperature would be degenerate matter such as neutronium.