yeah the sun does rise in the northern hemisphere
Assume your in the northern hemisphereThe earths rotational axis remains parallel throughout the year, winter is when the top of the axis is at full tilt away from the sun, summer is full tilt towards( half a year later)
It's all about the tilt of earth's axis. In January, earth's tilt brings the Southern Hemisphere to an angle where it gets more direct rays from the sun; the sun rises to its highest elevations in the southern sky. It doesn't have much to do with distance from the sun. In fact, during the cold season in the northern hemisphere, the earth is a little closer to the sun than it is during the north's warm season.
because the sun rotates around the earth for half a day.
The sun only rises and sets from your viewpoint- standing on the earth. As the earth turns, the sun becomes visible (rises) as your part of the world turns into the sun's light- it sets when your part of the world turns away from the light. But the sun is still shining- just on someplace where you are not.
The Northern Hemisphere tilts away from the sun in December and tilts close to the sun in June.!
They are...The Western HemisphereThe Northern HemisphereThe Eastern HemisphereThe Southern Hemisphere
They are...The Western HemisphereThe Northern HemisphereThe Eastern HemisphereThe Southern Hemisphere
The sun rises from the same direction as in the Northern Hemisphere, the east.
The sun rises from the same direction as in the Northern Hemisphere, the east.
The sun rises from the same direction as in the Northern Hemisphere, the east.
In the Northern Hemisphere, the Sun apparently rises in the east and sets in the west. In the Southern Hemisphere, it is the other way around. The Sun rises in the west and sets in the east. Note that the Sun does not actually move, it is Earth that makes it appear to move.
The sun rises in the east, same as in the northern hemisphere. The sun rising is a function of the planet's rotation, which is the same universally. The difference in seasons between the northern and southern hemispheres is a function of the Earth's tilt, and the changes in what areas face the sun more strongly depending on what point the Earth is in it's orbit around the sun.
In the northern hemisphere, the sun rises in the east and sets in the west. Its exact position on the horizon where it rises changes slightly throughout the year due to the tilt of the Earth's axis.
To determine direction from the sun, observe the sun's position in the sky. In the Northern Hemisphere, the sun is generally in the southern part of the sky, so facing the sun means you are facing south. In the Southern Hemisphere, the sun is generally in the northern part of the sky, so facing the sun means you are facing north.
Regardless of whether you are in the northern or southern hemisphere, the sun always rises south of east (and sets south of west) from September-March and the sun rises north of east (and sets north of west) from March-September. So in January, wherever you are, the sun will rise in the south-east.
hello blad it rises it the east brov yeah boii!i!i!i
Britain is in the Northern hemisphere, and as such the sun rises in the east and sets in the west (or north-west in midsummer)