which motion of the earth causes change in season
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Answer:
Our seasons change due to our planet's angle of tilt – 23.5 degrees – relative to our orbit around the sun.
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Around the June solstice, the North Pole is tilted toward the Sun and the Northern Hemisphere gets more of the Sun's direct rays. This is why June, July and August are summer months in the Northern Hemisphere.
Opposite Seasons
At the same time, the Southern Hemisphere points away from the Sun, creating winter during the months of June, July and August. Summer in the Southern Hemisphere is in December, January, and February, when the South Pole is tilted toward the Sun and the Northern Hemisphere is tilted away.
Axis Tilts the Same Way
The direction of Earth's tilt nearly doesn't change – the two hemispheres point toward the same position in space through the entire year. What does change, as Earth revolves around the Sun, is the position of the hemispheres in relation to the Sun – the Northern Hemisphere points toward the Sun during the northern summer and away from the Sun during the northern winter.
Elliptical Path Around the Sun
Earth's path around the Sun is not circular, nor is the Sun situated at the center of this path. Instead, Earth's orbit is elliptical, with the Sun closer to one end of the orbital path than the other. This means that Earth’s distance from the Sun varies throughout the year.
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