Geography, asked by narendrayadavs097, 1 month ago

When there summer in India what season in Australia

Answers

Answered by shrishti8875
0

Answer:

Answer: it is because,India is in the northern hemisphere and Australia is in the southern hemisphere. when the northern hemisphere is having summer, India has summer and Australia has winter.

Answered by asmarstmy949
0

Answer:

winter

Explanation:

Seasons do not occur due to differences in the distance of the earth from the sun throughout the year (these differences are extremely small). The seasons are the result of the tilt of the earth's axis.

The earth revolves around the sun once a year. But there are four seasons on earth, and the length of nights and days is different in each season. This difference is caused by the tilt of the earth's axis. The Earth's axis is a hypothetical line that connects the North and South Poles. But the axis of the earth is not straight from top to bottom. Rather, it is tilted by about 23/45 degrees compared to the orbital plane. This tilt and movement of the earth around the sun changes the season.

At the beginning of autumn, the northern half of the earth turns sideways from the sun. As a result, sunlight spreads slightly across the northern half of the earth, and the northern hemisphere experiences winter. At the same time, the sun is shining brightly on the southern half of the earth, which is spending the summer. At the beginning of spring, the earth is tilted towards the other side of the sun. Now the northern half of the earth is tilted towards the sun. Sunlight falls heavily on the northern half of the earth and the northern hemisphere experiences summer. At the same time, the sunlight on the southern half of the earth, which spends the winter, is less intense

Thus, when the North Pole is tilted towards the sun, the northern part of the earth has summer. With long days and short nights. After six months, the earth has moved to the other side of the sun. The northern half is now tilted towards the sun, and the northern part of the earth has short days and long nights.

This inclination of the axis has given us four seasons of the year, namely spring, summer, autumn and winter. Because the axis is tilted, different parts of the earth orient themselves toward the sun at different times.

Summer is warmer than winter. Because the sun's rays reach the earth at a more direct angle during the summer than in the winter, and also because the days are much longer than the nights in summer. During the winter, the sun's rays hit the earth at a great angle, and the days are very short. These effects are a continuation of the results of the tilt of the earth's axis.

Earth's orbit is not completely round. The earth is slightly closer to the sun in early autumn (winter in the northern hemisphere) and farther away in early spring. At the beginning of autumn, the earth is 91.4 million miles or 147.1 million kilometers from the sun, and at the beginning of spring, it is 94.5 million miles or 152.1 million kilometers from the sun. This difference in distance between heating and cooling, which is caused by the tilt of the earth's axis, has a much smaller effect on the seasons.

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