Environmental Sciences, asked by PuranGujjar5974, 10 months ago

What will you call the part of earth which gets sunlight

Answers

Answered by Alwingeo25
4

Answer:

The Sun has no sharply described surface like that of the Earth, due to the fact it is too warm to be some thing but gas. Rather, what seems to us as the surface is a layer in the Sun's atmosphere, the "photosphere" (sphere of light) which emits mild ("radiates") because ot its excessive temperature.

Answered by skyfall63
0

The "equator" receives the maximum "solar radiation" in a year. The difference in the "solar energy" amount the land gets causes the "atmosphere" to move the way it does

Explanation:

  • The "Earth's shape is spherical." This causes the Sun's rays to strike the surface of the Earth at different angles, thus creating "variances" in "temperatures" on Earth.
  • The Equator receives the "maximum direct sunlight" since sunlight arrives at a (90 degrees) "perpendicular angle" to the Earth
  • The Sun shines equally in all "parts of the Earth", however, the "Equator" is exposed to a very high amount of "direct sunlight" than "the poles". Whereas the Sun is "directly overhead" at the Equator, it is "slightly slanted" at the poles. The Earth is tilted at "23.5" degrees on its "axis" & remains "tilted" all thru the year.

To know more

explain why temperatures drop as you move farther from the equator ...

https://brainly.in/question/1410865

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