Day length varies due to axial tilt. As earth orbits the sun, higher latitudes receive more (or less) solar exposure. This has nothing to do with atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases.
In summation: No.
No, the greenhouse effect keeps the earth warm, but it has no effect on the length of days. Days are longer in summer because your hemisphere is tilted towards the sun and so gets more hours of daylight.
The residence times of major greenhouse gases vary significantly. Carbon dioxide (CO2) can remain in the atmosphere for hundreds to thousands of years, while methane (CH4) has a shorter residence time of about 12 years. Nitrous oxide (N2O) stays in the atmosphere for approximately 114 years. Water vapor, while a potent greenhouse gas, has a much shorter residence time, typically lasting only a few days to weeks due to its rapid cycle through evaporation and precipitation.
In 2009, the days would start getting shorter after the summer solstice, which occurs around June 21st. This is because the amount of daylight gradually decreases as the Earth's axial tilt leads to shorter days in the Northern Hemisphere.
Shorter. Mercury has a shorter orbit than earth and 1 day in mercury = 59 days on Earth. 1 year on mercury= 88 days on earth.
The Earth's rotation produces days and nights, some changes to the wind, but most importantly, the Coriolis Effect. The Coriolis effect has a large effect on wind, making it blow in huge circular paths.
No, the greenhouse effect keeps the earth warm, but it has no effect on the length of days. Days are longer in summer because your hemisphere is tilted towards the sun and so gets more hours of daylight.
I think school days should be shorter well since I'm a teen and we are doing a speech on this and it says teens need 8hrs of sleep (which I don't always) it can effect how long they sleep.
Kids either understand the value of school, or are at least willing to go through the motions of attending school, or they don't. Shorter days would have no effect on the number of kids who drop out.
have shorter school days for all the schools in austraila
Greenhouse gases can stay in the atmosphere for varying lengths of time, depending on the specific gas. For instance, carbon dioxide can persist for hundreds to thousands of years, while methane has a shorter lifespan of about 12 years. Water vapor, another greenhouse gas, can stay in the atmosphere for a much shorter period, typically less than 10 days.
No, days are not shorter in winter. The length of a day remains constant throughout the year. However, the amount of daylight hours during winter is shorter because the Earth's axis is tilted away from the sun, causing the sun to be lower in the sky and for days to have less daylight.
A year for mercury is shorter. It takes 88 days to orbit the sun, making one year on mercury about 3 earth months long.
Because the Earth is tilted on it's axis away from the sun. During winter; it tilts closer to the sun, making days longer.
shorter
The earth spins faster than the planets Mercury and Venus, meaning that its apparent days are shorter (24 hours).
Shorter.
177 days shorter on mercury than the earth