The sun emits 1.2×1034 J each year.
no
The position of the sun changes throughout the year due to the Earth's tilt, causing the sun's angle to vary, leading to different solar angles and lengths of daylight at different times of the year. This results in the changing seasons as the sun's position affects how much sunlight each hemisphere receives.
The sun rises once each year at the South Pole, and sets once each year. The average number of days in a year without a sunrise at the South Pole is 182.5.
January 3, each year.
A rotation.
From the 2nd Sun. of Mar. to the last Sun. of Mar., Wales (UTC) is 5 hours ahead of Chicago (UTC-5).From the last Sun. of Mar. to the last Sun. of Oct., Wales (UTC+1) is 6 hours ahead of Chicago (UTC-5).From the last Sun. of Oct. to the 1st Sun. of Nov., Wales (UTC) is 5 hours ahead of Chicago (UTC-5).From the 1st Sun. of Nov. to the 2nd Sun. of Mar., Wales (UTC) is 6 hours ahead of Chicago (UTC-6).6 AM CST (Chicago time Nov-Mar) =7 AM CDT (Chicago time Mar-Nov) =Noon GMT (Wales time Oct-Mar) =1 PM BST (Wales time Mar-Oct)
year
it makes a full orbit of the sun
A Neptunian year is much longer than a year on Earth because Neptune is significantly farther from the Sun, resulting in a longer orbital path. It takes Neptune about 165 Earth years to complete one orbit around the Sun, due to its greater distance and slower orbital speed. In contrast, Earth orbits the Sun in just one year, as it is much closer and moves faster in its orbit. This vast difference in distance and orbital dynamics accounts for the length of a year on each planet.
It takes a year or the earth to orbit the sun.
No, the heliocentric theory states that the Earth revolves around the Sun once each year.