Geography, asked by bm1998216, 5 months ago

the seasonare opposote in the northern and the southern hemisphere state reason​

Answers

Answered by rishikavasu2009
1

Explanation:

The seasons in the Northern Hemisphere are the opposite of those in the Southern Hemisphere. ... Seasons occur because Earth is tilted on its axis relative to the orbital plane, the invisible, flat disc where most objects in the solar system orbit the sun.

Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

December may be ... but our neighbors in the Southern Hemisphere rarely ever see snow on Christmas (except in Antarctica) for one simple reason—December begins their summer season.

How can this be? The reason why is the same as why we experience seasons at all—the Earth's tilt.

Our planet doesn't "sit" perfectly upright, but rather, leans 23.5° from its axis (the imaginary vertical line through Earth's center which points toward the North Star). As you may know, this tilt is what gives us the seasons. It also orients the Northern and Southern Hemispheres in opposite directions so that whenever one points its innermost toward the sun, the other aims away from the sun

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