Mid summer in the northern hemisphere. Max at around June 23rd.
Assuming the observer is in the North, then the southern hemisphere would be tilted towards the sun during the Winter Solstice in December. However, for observers in the Southern Hemisphere, the Winter Solstice would occur in June, and the northern hemisphere would be tilted towards the sun.
If you live in the northern hemisphere, Summer. If you live in the southern hemisphere, Winter. To be perhaps a little overly picky, at the moment that the north pole is pointing most directly toward the sun, it is the very end of northern spring, and the very beginning of norther summer. In the south, it is the end of autumn, and the beginning of winter.
The north pole of Earth is tilted away from the sun from late September until late March ...all through Autumn and Winter. The greatest tilt occurs around December 22 or 23 ... thebeginning of Winter.
when it's cold it would be tilted when its summer its Straight :)
Looking toward the north, the ray from you through the point 70 degrees above the horizon. 90 degrees would be directly overhead.Notation such as this is used to announce sightings of the International Space Station, for example:
it would be hotter if it were tilted toward it as it would be getting more direct sunlight than the other hemisphere
In June, it is summer in the Northern Hemisphere of Earth. So I'd assume that the Northern Hemisphere is closer to the Sun at that time, and that would probably occur because the North Pole is tilted towards the Sun during June. In fact, the Summer Solstice is in the middle of June somewhere.
If the south end of Earth's axis were tilted toward the sun, the Southern Hemisphere would experience longer and more intense summers, while the Northern Hemisphere would have shorter and milder summers. This would result in significant shifts in weather patterns and temperatures across the globe.
earths axis is responsible for seasons because if its tilted toward the sun then it would be summer in the northern hemisphere and winter in the southern now if it was tilted away from the sun then it would be winter in the northern hemisphere and summer in the southern hemisphere
It would be mid winter in the US as well.
When neither hemisphere is tilted toward the sun, it is known as an equinox. During an equinox, there is nearly equal amounts of daylight and darkness all across the world. This phenomenon occurs twice a year, in March and September.
Summer
Whatever direction you can possibly think of, the earth's axis is tilted by 23.5 degreesin that exact direction once every year.
The north end of a compass needle would point toward the north pole of a bar magnet.
No, when the South Pole is tilted toward the Sun, it is summer in the Southern Hemisphere and winter in the Northern Hemisphere. The tilt of the Earth's axis causes the seasons to be opposite in the two hemispheres.
The Earth is tilted on its axis causing the change in seasons. At 36 degrees Celsius in Santiago, Chile, it is likely experiencing summer in the Southern Hemisphere, meaning the Earth is tilted towards the Sun in that region.
Assuming the observer is in the North, then the southern hemisphere would be tilted towards the sun during the Winter Solstice in December. However, for observers in the Southern Hemisphere, the Winter Solstice would occur in June, and the northern hemisphere would be tilted towards the sun.