Earth's Tilt
1. Place a table lamp on a table.
2. Hold a globe such that the North Pole is pointed toward the light.
3. Observe the portion in the Northern Hemisphere that receives the light. Compare this with the portion in the Southern Hemisphere that also receives the light. Which part of the globe receives direct light rays
4. Move the globe counterclockwise until it is opposite the original position, without changing where the North Pole is pointed.
5. Observe the position in the Northern Hemisphere on which the light falls. Compare this with the position in the Southern Hemisphere that receives the light. Which part of the globe receives direct light rays?
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Answer:
1.The general norm here is to pick a lamp where the bottom of the shade is at your eye level when you are seated or resting. This works whether you are shopping for a table lamp that fits your reading nook, a beside lamp, or even one that goes next to the couch in the living room.
2.
When the Northern Hemisphere is tilted toward the sun, latitudes between the equator and 90°N (the North Pole) are experiencing summer. ... The summer season begins in the Northern Hemisphere on June 20 or 21, known as the summer solstice, when the axis of rotation is tilted a full 23.5° toward the sun.
3.When the Northern Hemisphere is tilted toward the sun, that part of the Earth receives more direct rays of sunlight during the daytime than the Southern Hemisphere does. The North Pole has 24 hours of daylight on this day, while the South Pole has 24 hours of darkness
4.the result of Earth's rotation on weather patterns and ocean currents. The Coriolis effect makes storms swirl clockwise in the Southern hemisphere and counterclockwise in the Northern Hemisphere.
5.
Explanation:
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