The northern hemisphere does not actually experience 6 months of winter and 6 months of sunshine. Instead, it has four distinct seasons—winter, spring, summer, and fall—caused by the tilt of the Earth's axis as it orbits the sun. This axial tilt results in varying angles of sunlight and day lengths throughout the year, leading to seasonal changes. However, in polar regions, extreme variations in daylight can occur, resulting in prolonged periods of darkness in winter and continuous daylight in summer, which might give the impression of extended seasons.
When the southern hemisphere is tilted toward the Sun it is summer there and winter in the northern hemisphere. The Earth's axis is on a tilt relative to the Sun. This means that during the year as it follows its regular orbit around the Sun, for a period one hemisphere is closer to the Sun than the other. This is what creates the seasons we have on Earth. When one hemisphere is closer to the Sun more heat is felt there. This is known as "summer". This is similar to how holding your hand closer to a flame will make your hand feel warmer. Clearly, at the time one hemisphere is closer to our Sun, the other hemisphere is further away, meaning it is in "winter". When the two hemispheres are equidistant from the Sun then it is spring in one and autumn (fall - if you're American) in the other.
There is no single answer to that. Different parts of the northern hemisphere will have different lengths of daylight on the 21st of June. The further north of the equator you go, the more hours of daylight there will be, with there being about 12 hours at the equator and 24 hours at the north pole. So you need to know exactly where in the northern hemisphere you are before the question can be answered.
The northern and southern hemispheres have opposite seasons because of earth's movement around the sun, turning as it goes. Here in Australia it is cold (well, as cold as it gets) while in England it is warm summer weather. When it is summer in the southern hemisphere (where Australia is), that hemisphere is tilted towards the sun and the rays have less distance to travel, while the top part (northern hemisphere) is tilted away from the sun so its rays have further to travel and are thus weaker. Some of the northern parts of Australia are tropical and so do not have the regular four seasons because they are positioned closer to the equator than other parts of Australia.
Bonnie Springs Old Nevada is a re-creation of an old west town. It features an Opera house, saloon, jail, and an emporium. They put on gunfights at regular intervals. It also contains a petting zoo and riding stables and a retaurant. Bonnie is the name of the original owner-a former showgirl, who still runs Bonnie Springs.
The official first day of the astronomical winter as mandated my the International Astronomical Union is December 21/22, 2011 (depending on the time zone) for the northern hemisphere and June 21, 2012 for the southern hemisphere.The official first day of the climatological winter as mandated by the World Meteorological Organization is always December 1 local time for the northern hemisphere and June 1 local time for the southern hemisphere.Canada and the USA customarily observe the astronomical winter while Australia and New Zealand observe the climatological winter. Preference for either of these methods varies in other western countries. Many east Asian countries use lunar dates to determine the beginning of winter and the other seasons.In temperate climates, an ecological winter can be determined that starts with the first regular snowfalls or when most hibernating animals have retreated to their winter quarters.It depends on what day it is?
When the southern hemisphere is tilted toward the Sun it is summer there and winter in the northern hemisphere. The Earth's axis is on a tilt relative to the Sun. This means that during the year as it follows its regular orbit around the Sun, for a period one hemisphere is closer to the Sun than the other. This is what creates the seasons we have on Earth. When one hemisphere is closer to the Sun more heat is felt there. This is known as "summer". This is similar to how holding your hand closer to a flame will make your hand feel warmer. Clearly, at the time one hemisphere is closer to our Sun, the other hemisphere is further away, meaning it is in "winter". When the two hemispheres are equidistant from the Sun then it is spring in one and autumn (fall - if you're American) in the other.
The cast of The Sunshine Hour - 1976 includes: Jim Bennet as Regular singer Joe Flaherty as Regular Gloria Kaye as Regular singer Eugene Levy as Regular Andrea Martin as Regular
calcium and sunshine
Without Radioisotope dating it is very difficult to determine the age of a surface exactly. One way to estimate the age of the surface is looking at the number of impact craters. Assuming meteorites hit at regular intervals, the surface with more impact craters is the oldest.
I do not fully interperet your question as a misunderstanding. However, you always play as Mario in Super Mario Sunshine, and furthermore he is the only playable character.
There is no single answer to that. Different parts of the northern hemisphere will have different lengths of daylight on the 21st of June. The further north of the equator you go, the more hours of daylight there will be, with there being about 12 hours at the equator and 24 hours at the north pole. So you need to know exactly where in the northern hemisphere you are before the question can be answered.
The northern and southern hemispheres have opposite seasons because of earth's movement around the sun, turning as it goes. Here in Australia it is cold (well, as cold as it gets) while in England it is warm summer weather. When it is summer in the southern hemisphere (where Australia is), that hemisphere is tilted towards the sun and the rays have less distance to travel, while the top part (northern hemisphere) is tilted away from the sun so its rays have further to travel and are thus weaker. Some of the northern parts of Australia are tropical and so do not have the regular four seasons because they are positioned closer to the equator than other parts of Australia.
Yes you can use Regular Gas. However, it's been my experience that using Premium is best. You get better mpg and just an overall better driving experience.
A gallon of regular was in the $1.20 - $1.30 range.
It has its first at four years old and then every year after that.
Blizzards are weather phenomena that do not occur on any regular schedule.
The version by Elizabeth Mitchell is much slower than the regular versions. Beautiful song.