why are the comets cold at the pole?
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*dont give me ggogle answer
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The North Pole (in the Arctic) has two seasons, summer and winter, but it never really gets toasty. The winters are some nine months long, while summers fill in the other three months. Mean temperatures in winter are a frosty -40 degrees F and a still chilly 32 degrees F in summer, just at freezing.
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Both Poles are relatively cold because they don't receive direct sunlight. Even during the summer months, the Sun is relatively low on the horizon. ... In addition, the Sun's rays have to travel through more of the Earth's atmosphere because of the angle of incidence at the Poles.
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