1) Near the equator, year round.
2) Almost anywhere on Earth, around the equinoxes.
One year on Jupiter is equal to 11 Earth years
The main events are: 1. Winter solstice - when the earth is tilted towards the sun. 2. Spring equinox - when day and night are equal in length. 3. Summer solstice - when the earth is tilted away from the sun. 4. Autumnal equinox - when day and night are equal in length.
A day on pluto is ^.$ earth days wich is really 6.4 earth days.
The length of a Martian day is equal to 1.027491204 Earth days. The length of one sidereal Martian year is equal to 1.880791 sidereal Earth years.
The equinox is when, twice each year, day and night are of equal length (about 22 September and 20 March).
The main events are: 1. Winter solstice - when the earth is tilted towards the sun. 2. Spring equinox - when day and night are equal in length. 3. Summer solstice - when the earth is tilted away from the sun. 4. Autumnal equinox - when day and night are equal in length.
No. That would be an Equinox. The solstice is when the earth is tilted at maximum angle, (23 1/2 degrees) from the plane of the orbit around the sun. Either north or south pole is closer. The exact difference of night and day will vary depending on where you are on earth.
One day on Mercury is equal to 1407.6 Earth hours.
the length of a day on Venus is 243 Earth days and a year on Venus is 225 Earth days!
The spring and autumn equinoxes, when day is equal to night in both hemispheres.
Pluto has an orbital period that is equal to 90,588 Earth days. As such, one year on Pluto is equal to about 248 years here in Earth.
Aequabilis (adj) meaning Equal & Nox, Noctis (n, f) meaning Night.