From the perspective of the Northern Hemisphere, this solstice will be called the "winter" solstice.
The Earth's orbit around the Sun is more circular and consistent, while a comet's orbit is typically more elliptical and variable. Comets also come from the outer solar system and have highly eccentric orbits that can bring them close to the Sun, leading to the development of a bright coma and tail due to the heat and radiation.
no its mostly carbon deoxide
Mars is mostly rock
Earth is covered mostly in water, but is not made up mostly of water. Most of earth is made of rock.
The days start becoming shorter after the summer solstice, which occurs around June 21st in the Northern Hemisphere. This marks the beginning of the gradual decrease in daylight hours until the winter solstice around December 21st.
Antarctica is the most southerly continent on Earth. It is located at the South Pole and is mostly covered in ice.
Southerly mostly
The Earth orbits in the plane of the ecliptic in an ellipsoidal orbit that is nearly circular. Comets orbits are highly elliptical and mostly out of the plane of the ecliptic.
Ideally, the summer solstice is the day with the most sun. It's either June 20th or June 21st. It depends on the year, and what the government decides to publish it as. I've seen it vary a few times, but I've mostly seen it as the 21st.
Not exactly. The sun is always shining on parts of both the northern hemisphere and the southern hemisphere. As the Earth is tilted, there are times when it shines on more of one than the other. At the point it is shining on its maximum amount of one hemisphere, it is a solstice. It is still shining on the other hemisphere too, but just not as much as it is at other times. That happens in June, when it is mostly shining on the northern hemisphere, giving it longer days and shorter nights, and in December, when it is mostly shining on the southern hemisphere and it has the longer days and shorter nights.
Scorpius, known as the constellation Scorpio in astronomy, can be found in the southern celestial hemisphere. It is visible from latitudes between +40° and -90°. Scorpius is best observed during the summer months in the northern hemisphere.
The Earth's orbit around the Sun is more circular and consistent, while a comet's orbit is typically more elliptical and variable. Comets also come from the outer solar system and have highly eccentric orbits that can bring them close to the Sun, leading to the development of a bright coma and tail due to the heat and radiation.
The beginning of Winter is marked by the Winter Solstice which - in our life time - has been on either December 21 or December 22. The date is gradually shifting. The exact time of the solstice does depend where you are located in the U. S. For Chicago, in recent years, it has mostly fallen on December 21. In the 2040's, it will start falling on December 20 every 4 years until 2081 when Dec 20 becomes more frequent.
In the solar system you would find the Sun, planets and their moons, asteroids (some in asteroid belts, some in trojan points, some in shared orbits), comets, gas and dust mostly in the plane of the ecliptic and not already cleared out by massive bodies, particles (and radiation) mostly emitted by the Sun, a few artificial probes sent from planet Earth and even exotic things (if you could detect them) like dark matter.
In the solar system you would find the Sun, planets and their moons, asteroids (some in asteroid belts, some in trojan points, some in shared orbits), comets, gas and dust mostly in the plane of the ecliptic and not already cleared out by massive bodies, particles (and radiation) mostly emitted by the Sun, a few artificial probes sent from planet Earth and even exotic things (if you could detect them) like dark matter.
It could but it is not likely; on the winter solstice (December 21st or 22nd), the sun still gets quite high above the horizon (about 25 degrees), so it could snow but it is more common further north.
The Isle and Royal Manor of Portland is the most southerly point of the County of Dorset in England. Famous for its Stone production which has been shipped around the world, and used in some of the most famous landmarks in the world. From Portland Rover.