Equatorial regions are getting hotter due to the increase in greenhouse gas emissions that trap heat in the atmosphere, leading to global warming. The polar regions are also warming, but at a faster rate than equatorial regions due to a phenomenon known as polar amplification, where feedback mechanisms amplify the warming effects in these areas.
No, heat transfer through radiation occurs from hotter to colder body. This is because energy is transferred in the form of electromagnetic waves from a hotter object to a colder one to achieve thermal equilibrium.
Many things can be colder than ice; since hell has not been explored like many other regions, we do not know its mean temperature and cannot determine what is and is not warmer than it.
No, in Celsius temperature scale, lower temperatures are colder and higher temperatures are hotter.
No, heat energy flows from hotter to colder objects. This is based on the second law of thermodynamics, which states that heat will naturally transfer from a warmer object to a cooler object until thermal equilibrium is reached.
Heat flows from the hotter object to the colder object until thermal equilibrium is reached, meaning both objects reach the same temperature. This is based on the second law of thermodynamics, which dictates that heat spontaneously flows from a higher temperature to a lower temperature.
If the Earth were tilted at 40 degrees, the seasons would be more extreme in the regions closer to the poles. This would result in longer and colder winters, and hotter summers. The equatorial regions might experience less variation in temperature throughout the year.
Temperatures are generally hotter the closer you are to the equator, and colder the farther you are from it. This is because the equator receives more direct sunlight throughout the year compared to regions further away.
because they are mirroring eachother (they are on different parts of the equator)
Colder
Equatorial areas are hotter than the rest of the earth surface because they get more exposure to direct sunlight, in contrast to polar regions where the sun does not shine for six months at a time.
Things get hotter because of the sun, and things get colder because of the snow
hotter
No, heat transfer through radiation occurs from hotter to colder body. This is because energy is transferred in the form of electromagnetic waves from a hotter object to a colder one to achieve thermal equilibrium.
Hotter the temperature the hotter the water or the colder the temperature the colder the water gets
Colder, much colder.
colder because its an outer planet and earth is an inner.So remember inner=hotter outer=colder
definitely hotter