The is low in the summer
Because the center of the raibow you see is on the line from the sun through your head. When the sun is low, the center of the rainbow is high, and you see more of it. When the sun is high, the center of the rainbow is low, and you see less of it.
Spring Tides. That is the High tide is very high and the low tide is very low. When the Sun, Earth and Moon are at 'right-angles to each other, then we have Neap Tides. The height range between high and low tides is much less than Spring Tides.
There are more low mass stars. this is for two reasons:- # the star forming process generates more low mass stars # High mass stars burn out very quickly and explode as supernovas and thus over time there are less and less of them.
The rotation of the Earth and the gravitational pull of the Moon and the Sun.
The sun is higher in the sky in summer because of the tilt of the Earth's axis. During the summer solstice, the hemisphere tilted towards the sun receives more direct sunlight, causing the sun to appear higher in the sky and create longer days.
in the summer it is high in the air in the winter its low.
in the summer it is high in the air in the winter its low.
Summer
The sun heats the air which causes high and low pressure systems which results in wind. high to low.
In the summer - or more specifically, on the summer solstice (June 21 in the northern hemisphere, December 21 in the southern hemisphere) the noon Sun is as high in the sky as it will get. If the Sun were directly overhead, you would cast no shadow at all. As summer progresses into fall, the noon Sun will be lower and lower in the sky until the winter solstice, when the noon Sun is low in the sky, and the noon shadows will be longer.
the diffrencce between high tide and low is a high tide is by the gravitaion pull of the moon and/or the sun and a low tide is in the middle between the moon an sun
Late spring, summer and early fall the sun appears high in the sky, late fall, winter and early spring, it appears to be low in the sky. this is caused by earth's tilting when orbiting around the sun and rotating on it's axis.
I was about to reply that this was exactly reversed, when I realized that you must be from the southern hemisphere; Australia, perhaps. Here during our northern hemisphere winter, I see the Sun rising in the southeast, passing low across the southern horizon, and setting in the southwest. The reason that this is winter is BECAUSE the Sun is low on the horizon, and the light and heat from the Sun hit California, where I live, at a low angle, and the sunlight is spread across a wide area. In the summer, the sun rises high in your sky, beating almost straight down on you. If the summer Sun rises in the southeast and passes north of you, then you must be in the southern hemisphere.
The sun's zenith is higher in the sky during the summer months, regardless of which hemisphere you are in. At the 45th parallel the sun will rise to about 45° at high noon.
If the sun didn't help the moon make a high tide and low then there wouldn't be such of a high tide and probably when there is a low tide the water will be even further than a regular low tide.
In the Mediterranean regions, precipitation, mainly from rainfall, is relatively low and the sun intensity is high. During summer, the weather is warm to hot, and winters are cool but mild.
50 degrees f as the high and 10 degrees f as the low