The Earth is tilted 23 degrees.
The direction of the tilt always remains in the same direction, and therefore, as the Earth moves around the Sun, the Southern hemisphere would for almost half the orbit be closer to the Sun (summer) than the Northern hemisphere (winter), while for a little less than the other half of the orbit the Northern hemisphere would be closer (summer), while the Southern Hemisphere would be further away (winter).
At both sides of the orbits there would be a point where the tilt is neither towards or away from the Sun, in which case both hemispheres would be equally far away from the Sun - fall / spring.
when it's cold it would be tilted when its summer its Straight :)
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.
Tilted away, the nights would be longer and the days shorter. Such a time would be the winter season.
sure
Tilted as compared to what? The only comparison that actually makes any difference is that the Earth's axis of rotation is "tilted" at about 23.5 degrees compared to the ecliptic, which is the plane of the Earth's orbit around the Sun. This "axial tilt" causes the seasons.
The earth is tilted away from the sun.
Because of how the earth is tilted. In the western hemisphere in the winter season, the earth is tilted further away from the sun in comparison to the eastern hemisphere because of how the earth sits on its axis. When it is tilted further away from the sun in this point in the revolution, it will recieve less light because of its angle.
Winter!
Winter, spring, summer, autumn. The Earth is ALWAYS tilted, otherwise there would be no seasons. (see related question)
The earth's axis of rotation is tilted relative to the earth's path around the sun. As a result we are tilted towards the sun in the summer and away from the sun in the winter.
At both the winter and summer solstices, the Earth is tilted towards the sun. What differs is which hemisphere is tilted towards the sun. In the northern hemisphere at its winter solstice, the southern hemisphere is tilted towards the sun, while the northern hemisphere it tilted away from the sun. In the southern hemisphere at its winter solstice, the northern hemisphere is tilted towards the sun, while the southern hemisphere it tilted towards the sun. When it is the winter solstice in one hemisphere, it is the summer solstice is in the other hemisphere. For a winter solstice, that particular hemisphere is tilted away from the sun.
Winter and cold
It would be winter.
winter
During the winter solstice, the northern hemisphere of the Earth is tilted away from the sun; during the summer solstice, the northern hemisphere of the Earth is tilted towards the sun.
when it's cold it would be tilted when its summer its Straight :)
The earth is tilted 23.4°, so from summer to winter, when the tilt is away from the sun, the difference is 46.8°.