Yes but not at the same time of course.
spring equinox and autumnal equinox
An equinox is like a balancing act, where day and night dance in perfect harmony, each taking equal turns on the stage of the Earth. It’s as if the sun pauses to give both light and darkness a moment to shine equally.
It is called the Equinox. It is when both axis of the world are facing away from the sun. The sun's plane then is directly over the Equator. It happens twice a year, there is the September Equinox and the March Equinox.
stars do shine in morning but when compared to sun's shining their shine is nothing that's why we are not able to see stars in morning
shine / shines /am-is-are shining are present.shone is past
spring equinox and autumnal equinox
The Aurora Borealis (Northern lights) and the Aurora Australis (Southern lights) both "shine" all year round. They are caused by energized particles from the sun striking the Earth's Magnetosphere.
January is summer in the southern hemisphere. Likewise, July is winter. The seasons are reversed in the two hemispheres because the Sun can only shine more directly on either the Northern or Southern hemispheres (creating summer), due to the axial tilt of the Earth.
No. That is the Tropic of Cancer. The Tropic of Capricorn's dates are in December.
Yes.
in Alaska, the northern half of the Earth where it snows usually, Michigan, and the south pole.
The sun shines directly overhead at the equator on September 22 during the equinox. This phenomenon marks the beginning of fall in the Northern Hemisphere and spring in the Southern Hemisphere.
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Around the north pole in the (northern hemisphere) summer.
The sun shines north primarily during the summer season in the Northern Hemisphere, which occurs around June to September. During this time, the North Pole is tilted towards the sun, resulting in longer daylight hours and the sun's rays hitting northern regions more directly. Conversely, in the Southern Hemisphere, summer occurs around December to March, when the sun shines more directly on southern regions.
they live in the southern end of uranous where the sun dont shine.
The Earth revolves around the Sun. You might think that this is caused because the Earth has an elliptic orbit but the distance to the Sun has nothing to do with the temperature on Earth. Otherwise how can it be winter on the Northern hemisphere and summer on the Southern at the same time? The angle of the Sunlight passing through our atmosphere is what really affects the temperature. Since the Earth rotates around it's axis, but this axis has an angle, the Sun will not always shine on Earth from the same angle. The Sun will "move" from the Northern hemisphere back to the Southern back to the Northern and so on. Causing the change in temperature and seasons.