because of it fast moving axis there is no possible way for human life
Mercury, with an axial tilt of ~0.01
It is 0.01 degrees.
The axis of the Earth runs from the North Pole to the South Pole, passing through the center of the planet. It is tilted at an angle of approximately 23.5 degrees relative to the plane of Earth's orbit around the Sun. This tilt is responsible for the changing seasons as the Earth revolves around the Sun.
As the Earth travels in its yearly orbit around the sun, in some seasons the axial tilt will cause the northern hemisphere to be tilted toward the sun while the southern hemisphere is tilted away from the sun, and in other seasons it is the opposite. Whichever hemisphere tilts toward the sun gets more sunlight and is therefore warmer.
The axis is actually an imaginary line that the Earth spins around. It represents the tilt of the Earth relative to its orbit.
the seasons either get colder or warmer, depending on the tilt of the axis.
Mercury's axis tilt is 0°. Venus' axis tilt is 177.4°. Earth's axis tilt is 23.5°. Mars' axis tilt is 25.2°. Jupiter's axis tilt is 3.1°. Saturn's axis tilt is 25.3°. Uranus' axis tilt is 97.8°. Neptune's axis tilt is 28.8°. Pluto's axis tilt is 122.5°.
Uranus and Pluto have a tilt and have extreme seasons. Mars, Saturn, and Neptune have seasons that are similar to ours.
Uranus has seasons because its axis is tilted by about 98 degrees relative to its orbit around the Sun. This extreme tilt causes different parts of the planet to receive varying amounts of sunlight as it orbits, resulting in distinct seasonal changes.
maybe
its earths tilt on its axis orbiting the sun
Yes. Day and night are caused by the rotation of the Earth on it's axis and has nothing to do with it's tilt. The tilt has an effect on seasons.
the seasons either get colder or warmer, depending on the tilt of the axis.
the seasons either get colder or warmer, depending on the tilt of the axis.
They change by the tilt of the earth's axis!
This tilt is what causes the seasons.
Uranus spins horizontally on its axis, meaning it rotates on its side compared to the other planets in our solar system. This unique tilt causes Uranus to have extreme seasons, with each pole experiencing 42 years of continuous sunlight followed by darkness.