June 21, North Pole: Bright sun 24 hours, snow everywhere, but feels warm or cool. June 21, Equator: 12 hours day, hot and steamy; 12 hours night, hot and steamy.
December 21, North Pole: Night 24 hours, snow everywhere, feels very cold, sometimes a bright moon and aurora.
December 21, Equator: 12 hours day, hot and steamy; 12 hours night, hot and steamy.
The sun is farthest north of the Equator during the summer solstice, which occurs around June 21st each year, and farthest south during the winter solstice around December 21st.
june 21 december 21
On June 21 at the Equator, the sun would rise directly east. Regardless of where you are on the Equator, the sun would rise due east and set due west.
The sun is directly over the Tropic of Cancer, latitude 23.5 degrees north of the Equator. This has the most hours of daylight on June 22nd, which is the Summer Solstice in the Northern Hemisphere.
The two days of the year when the sun is directly over the Tropic of Cancer (23.5° N) is on the June solstice, around June 21st. The two days when the sun is directly over the Tropic of Capricorn (23.5° S) is on the December solstice, around December 21st. These are the summer and winter solstices, respectively.
It depends where you are in Africa. If you are North of the Equator winter is December, January, and February. If you are South of the Equator your winter is June, July, and August.
If you are north of the equator, it's on December 22 or 23. Â If you are south of the equator, it's on June 21 or 22.
About 23.5 degrees north of it on June 21, and about 23.5 degrees south of it on December 22.
It begins moving back toward the equator. Those occasions occur near June 21 and near December 21.
in the winter : the sun is lower in the sky in winter so it takes less time to set :D
The sun is farthest north of the Equator during the summer solstice, which occurs around June 21st each year, and farthest south during the winter solstice around December 21st.
June 21, the day of the solstice.
The solstices. One of them is in June and the other in December, usually on the 21st of the month.
If you are north of the equator, it's within a few days of December 21. If you are south of the equator, it's within a few days of June 21. Either way, it's on the summer solstice.
"Solstices" ... June 21 and December 21.
june 21 december 21
the equator passes through austraila