At the equator at the equinoxes, and at some point between the two tropic latitudes (Cancer or Capricorn) the rest of the year.
The equator receives direct rays from sun. It is present in front of sun.
The sun's rays are strongest at 0 degrees latitude.
The distribution of incoming solar radiation during the course of a year is exactly equal at both poles, and neither of them ever receives any 'direct' rays.
I would try going to NASA.com and looking up that answer
They get the most direct rays from the sun.
The temperature rises most from direct rays because they are more concentrated than slanted rays. Direct rays hit the Earth's surface more directly, leading to more heat absorption compared to slanted rays that are spread over a larger area.
The equator receives direct rays from sun. It is present in front of sun.
When the North Pole tilts away from the sun, the most direct rays strike the Southern Hemisphere, closer to the Tropic of Capricorn. This results in winter in the Northern Hemisphere and summer in the Southern Hemisphere.
A+ at the equator-inator DOOF
tropic of cancer
During the daytime.
There's no place where the angle of the sun's rays doesn't change. But the place thataverages the most direct rays for the longest time in the course of a year is the equator.That's zero latitude.That's probably why it's so warm there.
The direct rays of the sun are rays from the sun that hit a certain area.
The sun's rays are strongest at 0 degrees latitude.
direct rays are from the sun and indirect rays are from something else, like it was reflected or something(ex:the moon. It bounces the sun's rays) AKT♥
During an equinox, the sun's rays are most direct at the Earth's equator. This is because during an equinox, the tilt of the Earth's axis is such that the sun is directly over the equator, leading to equal day and night lengths at all latitudes.
The area that receives the most direct rays of sun is the equator. This region experiences consistently high solar insolation throughout the year due to its position along the Earth's midsection, where sunlight strikes most directly.