You are on page 1of 8

Name __________________________________________Date _________ Environmental Articles:

The Tilting of the Earth: Shaping Our Seasons and Climates By Eric McLamb, September 10, 2011
(http://www.ecology.com/2011/09/10/tilting-earth-shaping-seasons/)

In early January each year, Earth reaches its closest distance to sun. At this time, the northern hemisphere experiences winter while the southern hemisphere experiences summer. The Earth travels to its farthest point from the sun at the beginning of July each year, when it is summer in the Northern Hemisphere and winter in the Southern Hemisphere.

Earths Movements

Earth travels around the Sun at about 18.4 miles per second while rotating on its axis at about 1,070 miles per hours. Pictured above is Earth during summer for the Northern Hemisphere where the North Pole (center of the Arctic Ice Cap) receives sunlight 24 hours a day. Image: University of Toledo) Hurtling through space at an average speed of 18.4 miles per second (30km per second), Earth is constantly changing its position with the sun. Not only is the Earth orbiting around the sun, but it also rotating on its axis at 1,070 miles per hour (1,722 km per hour), the speed at the equator. It is, however, a common misconception that the Earths distance from the sun determines how warm or cold the planet gets. While it is true that Earth does have a perihelion, or point at which it is closest to the sun, and an aphelion, its farthest point from the sun, the difference between these distances is too minimal as to have any significant impact on the Earths seasons and climate. The average
Page 1

Name __________________________________________Date _________

distance of the Earth from the sun is about 93 million miles (149.6 million km) also referred to as one astronomical unit or AU. At its closest point, the Earth is about 91.1 million miles (147 million km) from the sun; conversely, the sun is about 94.8 million miles (152 million km) away when it is at aphelion. With these numbers, its easy to figure out that the Earths orbit around the sun is not so much elliptical (oval) as it is circular, and that the Earths distance from the sun remains relatively constant throughout its annual orbit. So what does the Earths orbit around the sun have to do with our planets constantly changing temperatures and changing seasons? The answer is everything! The Earth is constantly changing its position with the sun. Thats because the Earth tilts in relation to the sun. That is what creates the differences in the seasons and the annual warming and cooling cycles of the Earths Northern and Southern Hemispheres. The Earth is tilted 23.5 degrees on its axis, a straight line through the planet from the North Pole to the South Pole. The Earth spins around, or rotates, on this axis as it orbits the sun. The key here is that as the Earth orbits the sun, different regions on Earth tilt both towards and away from the sun, depending on the regions respective hemisphere. This causes the suns light and energy to hit the different regions of the Earth at different angles throughout the course of one orbit, or one full year.

The Seasons

This diagram indicates the orbital position of the Earth as it reaches winter, spring, summer and fall. Note the tilt in relation to the Sun. Source: NOAA When the North Pole tilts most toward the sun, the Northern Hemisphere experiences summer. This occurs when the Earth is farthest away from the sun, and begins around June 21-22. Astronomers refer to the arrival of this event as the Summer Solstice in the Northern Hemisphere. This is the time when Earth reaches its closest orbital distance to the sun. As the Earth continues along its path around the sun, its angle constantly shifts the North Pole away Page 2

Name __________________________________________Date _________

from the sun and the South Pole toward the sun. The suns energy is more concentrated on the Northern Hemisphere where its rays hit the Earth more directly and are thus more intense. At the same time, however, the Southern Hemisphere tilts away from the sun, causing the suns rays to hit the region more at an angle and with less intensity. This brings about winter in the Southern Hemisphere, called the Winter Solstice.

The Equinoxes
Spring and Fall (or Autumn) occur midway on the Earths journey from winter to summer and from summer to winter. These times occur when the sun appears to be directly over the Earths equator, and the length of days and nights are equal over most of the planet. On March 20 or 21 of each year, the Earth reaches the vernal equinox, which marks the arrival of Spring in the north and Fall in the south. The autumnal equinox occurs on September 22-23 and marks the arrival of Fall in the north and Spring in the south.

Putting It All Together

Venus' surface (pictured) maintains an average temperature of about 882F due to the extremely high concentrations of carbon dioxide (CO2) in its atmosphere. CO2 is a greenhouse gas that also exists in Earth's atmosphere but at lower concentration levels that help maintain life-sustaining temperatures. Source: NASA We know that Earth rotates on its axis as it travels around the sun in an almost circular orbit. We also know that, because the Earth tilts on its axis, its seasons change as it orbits the sun. When it is Summer in the Northern Hemisphere, it is Winter in the Southern Hemisphere, and this has nothing to do with how close or far the Earth gets to or away from the Sun in its orbit. Its all because the Earth is tilted on its axis. The Earths overall orbit or distance from the sun would make a difference if it was located where, for instance, Mercury is or where Pluto is. As Dr. Jack Hall from ecology.coms Dr. Jacks Natural World says: Its the three bears syndrome. Were not too close to the sun, and were not too far away. Were j-u-u-u-u-st right!)
Page 3

Name __________________________________________Date _________

All this does not explain why our planet maintains its relatively warm, life-sustaining temperatures and climates that can for the most part sustain life. It also does not explain why life on Earth doesnt burn up. For Earth to maintain its average temperature of 61F (16.1C), it requires a very delicate balance within its atmosphere, oceans and solid Earth.

The Sahara Desert, pictured, records the hottest temperatures on Earth. Located in the northern part of Africa, the Sahara's highest temperatures average around 130F. Image: MIT Earths coldest temperature averages about minus 60F (-45F to -97F) and its hottest temperature averages about 130F-plus. While these extremes make most life impossible to naturally exist or thrive, they occur only in remote areas of the planet, such as the Antarctic (coldest average temperatures) or the Sahara Desert (hottest). Still, these temperatures are relatively warm (or cool) compared to other planets.

Earths Checks and Balances


Earth has a built-in, naturally-occurring force field around it that creates and helps maintain viable living conditions for its plant and animal inhabitants. The atmosphere contains greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide to keep the Earth warm, and an ozone layer to protect the Earth from harmful and incinerating (burning) radiation. The Earth also has other checks and balances that help it absorb and retain the suns heat and energy (such as the oceans) as well as reflect its energy back into space (such as the polar ice caps). Wind and ocean currents also help distribute this heat around the globe, all within the Earths protective atmosphere. The point is that Earth is unique in its ability to create and maintain sustainable living conditions, because all of its systems and influences are connected to each other, from its atmosphere, oceans and land, to its seasons, its living inhabitants and the sun.

Page 4

Name __________________________________________Date _________

Did you know.?


y

y y

The hottest temperature ever recorded on Earth is 136F in El Azizia, Libya, in Northern Africa on the northern fringe of the Sahara Desert. A close second is Death Valley in Californias Mojave Desert, which registered 134F on July 10, 1913. The coldest temperature ever recorded on the planets surface did not occur at the South Pole but at Vostok, Antarctica, on July 31, 1983. It was -128.6F It is the Sahara Deserts dryness, not heat, that makes it a desert. The frozen continent of Antarctica, the coldest place on Earth, is so dry that some scientists consider it a desert, too. Our solar system orbits around the center of the Milky Way, our home galaxy. It takes approximately 225 million years for the sun to make one revolution or trip around the Milky Way. The speed of the Earth is fastest when it is closest to the Sun, in January, and slowest when it is farthest away from the sun, in July. In other words, in January, it will be moving faster than average, and in July, it will be moving slower than average. Earths solar system is located on the outer edge on the Milky Way, about 28,000 light years from the center of the galaxy. Most of the Milky Ways 200 billion other stars and their planets are clustered in the center. This leads many scientists to believe that if the solar system were located more toward the center of our giant galaxy, life on Earth would be impossible because of the overwhelming heat and energy emitting from those stars. Although most planets spin on their axis that are tilted only a few degrees, the third largest planet, Uranus, spins on an axis that is virtually perpendicular to the sun. Still, it is hotter at its equator than at its poles, the reasons for which are unknown.

Page 5

Name __________________________________________Date _________ Environmental Articles:

The Tilting of the Earth: Shaping Our Seasons and Climates

Questions on the Article DIRECTIONS: After you read the article, answer the questions below. Questions with a * before them are questions that ask you to think about what you have read and do not always have answers right from the text. 1. What happens in January in terms of how close the earth is to the sun? What happens in July? What is different about the northern and southern hemisphere this time of year? ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ 2. How fast does the earth move around the sun? How fast does the earth spin on its axis? ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ 3. *Why do you think the spin of the earth does not seem so fast to us? ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ 4. What is the difference between perihelion and aphelion? Why doesnt the difference between these two points affect the seasons that much? ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ 5. What actually creates the changes in temperature and season? ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________

Page 6

Name __________________________________________Date _________

6. What is the earths axis? What is the angle at which the earth is tilted on its axis? ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ 7. At the time that summer occurs in the Northern Hemisphere, the earth is actually the farthest distance from the sun. What fact makes summer happen at that time? ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ 8. *What is happening to the angle of the suns rays during winter? What is happening to the angle during summer? Why does this make a change in season and temperature? ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ 9. What is the vernal equinox? What is the autumnal equinox? What do these two events have in common? ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ 10. What is the surface temperature of the planet Venus? Why is it so warm? ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ 11. What is in our atmosphere that helps maintain conditions that are life-sustaining? * What would happen if the amount of this substance would increase a lot? Why is earth subject to the three bears syndrome? ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________

Page 7

Name __________________________________________Date _________

12. What is required to maintain the earth at an average temperature of 61F? ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ 13. What two places on earth have the most extreme hot and cold temperatures? ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ 14. What are the earths two main checks and balances? ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ 15. List the other check and balances mentioned in the article: ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________

 Write down the articles main idea in a short sentence: ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________

Page 8

You might also like