Science, asked by asiyaskhan100, 4 months ago

(write in Detail) why seasons cannot occur on other planets​

Answers

Answered by studyj690
0

Answer:

Mercury has no tilt, so its seasons are caused by its highly elliptical path around the Sun. Venus is the second closest planet to the Sun. Its orbit does not cause the seasons because it is nearly circular. ... The planet's elliptical path and its significant tilt produce the

Answered by AfrahNajeeb
0

The seasons are caused by the regular, repeating way a planet changes its orientation with respect to the Sun, as it follows its orbital path. Both the amount of solar radiation and its point of entry into the planet's atmosphere change at any given spot.

Mercury has no tilt, so its seasons are caused by its highly elliptical path around the Sun. Venus is the second closest planet to the Sun. Its orbit does not cause the seasons because it is nearly circular. The planet's elliptical path and its significant tilt produce the seasons.

Uranus, like Earth, has a nearly circular orbit, so it remains at the same distance from the sun throughout its long year. It's the planet's tilt that gives Uranus its seasons, just as Earth's seasons are caused by our world's tilt on its axis. But the tilts of our planets are different.

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