Edit Template

Solstice on a Spinning Earth

Copyright:

中文翻譯:

原文:
Can you tell that today is a solstice by the tilt of the Earth? Yes. At a solstice, the Earth’s terminator — the dividing line between night and day — is tilted the most. The featured time-lapse video demonstrates this by displaying an entire year on planet Earth in twelve seconds. From geosynchronous orbit, the Meteosat 9 satellite recorded infrared images of the Earth every day at the same local time. The video started at the September 2010 equinox with the terminator line being vertical: an equinox. As the Earth revolved around the Sun, the terminator was seen to tilt in a way that provides less daily sunlight to the northern hemisphere, causing winter in the north. At the most tilt, winter solstice occurred in the north, and summer solstice in the south. As the year progressed, the March 2011 equinox arrived halfway through the video, followed by the terminator tilting the other way, causing winter in the southern hemisphere — and summer in the north. The captured year ends again with the September equinox, concluding another of the billions of trips the Earth has taken — and will take — around the Sun. APOD Review: RJN’s Night Sky Network Lecture
來源:NASA每日圖片

About

無論您是新手家長還是經驗豐富的育兒達人,這裡都有適合您的內容。我們鼓勵您分享您的經歷和建議,讓我們一起為孩子們創造更美好的成長環境!

Tags

    Recent Post

    • All Posts
    • Blog
    • 兒童成長
    • 兒童繪本
    • 天文圖
    • 比賽活動
    • 活動講座

    版權所有 © 2025 親子成長智慧樹

    返回頂端