I Hope Everyone Is Staying Warm

I read online that northern India had a cold wave recently. My friends in the Midwest/East Coast of the USA endured an epic freeze. Winter has made the news a lot this year, and the Winter Olympics haven't even begun yet.


What causes winter?

The tilt of the Earth's axis. Periodic fluctuations in the intensity of the solar wind. Variations in the Earth-Sun distance due to our elliptical orbit. Cycles in the Ocean's circulation.

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5 solutions

Nicholas Wei
Jan 20, 2014

The seasons are caused by the tilt of the Earth's rotational axis away or toward the sun as it travels through its year-long path around the sun.

The Earth has a tilt of 23.5 degrees relative to the "ecliptic plane" (the imaginary surface formed by it's almost-cicular path around the sun). The tilt toward the sun is maximized during Northern Hemisphere summer in late June (the "summer solstice"). At this time, the amount of sunlight reaching the Northern Hemisphere is at a maximum.

In late December, on the date of the "winter solstice", the Earth's tilt away from the sun is maximized, leading to a minimum of sunlight reaching the Northern Hemisphere. The seasons, of course, are reversed in the Southern Hemisphere.

During the winter, cold air masses build up over North America, Europe, and Asia, due to the low intensity of sunlight. The oceanic air masses are much less affected by the seasons because circulations in the upper ocean replenish warm surface water if it has been cooled.

The strong temperature contrast between the cold air masses over land and the relatively warmer air masses over the ocean lead to extratropical (non-tropical) cyclone formation (low pressure). These storms are thus much more frequent and intense in the winter than in the summer.

Credits to http://www.weatherquestions.com/What causes the_seasons.htm

I had thought about it just before i chose some other. My first decision was correct

Aditya Dutta - 7 years, 4 months ago

thanks a lot

amgalan amgaa - 7 years, 4 months ago

That's great.

Akshay Gupta - 7 years, 4 months ago

I watched the program about Earths tilt in discovery channel few days before and hence i could remeber!

Pratham Bhatia - 7 years, 3 months ago

science rocks ^^ forever i want to be a scientist and invent things that will help man kind to do good things that gadget will stop human kinds to do bad things ^^

Tensei Kato - 7 years, 2 months ago

increase in distance between the sun and earth decreases the intensity pf the light from the sun to the earth

Prithvi Raj - 7 years, 2 months ago
Roshan Sawhil
Jan 20, 2014

Though the Earth is not always equidistant from the Sun, & has its 'perihelion' & 'aphelion' positions, the seasons are the result of the 23.4 deg tilt of the Earth's axis. For instance, if it is winter in the Northern Hemisphere of the Earth, it is because the sun rays are never normally incident in that region. [This can be easily observed, since at 12 noon the sun wouldn't be overhead.] This means that the Sun must take a shorter path across the sky, causing the length of the day to shrink & hence heating the earth to a lesser degree.

Pranav Vashistha
Jan 21, 2014

As the earth spins on its axis, producing night and day, it also moves about the sun in an elliptical (elongated circle) orbit that requires about 365 1/4 days to complete. The earth's spin axis is tilted with respect to its orbital plane. This is what causes the seasons. When the earth's axis points towards the sun, it is summer for that hemisphere. When the earth's axis points away, winter can be expected. Since the tilt of the axis is 23 1/2 degrees, the North Pole never points directly at the Sun, but on the summer solstice it points as close as it can, and on the winter solstice as far as it can. Midway between these two times, in spring and autumn, the spin axis of the earth points 90 degrees away from the sun. This means that on this date, day and night have about the same length: 12 hours each, more or less.

Why should this tilt of the Earth's axis matter to our weather? To understand this, take a piece of paper and a flashlight. Shine the light from the flashlight straight onto the paper, so you see an illuminated circle. All the light from the flashlight is in that circle. Now slowly tilt the paper, so the circle elongates into an ellipse. All the light is still in that ellipse, but the ellipse is spread out over more paper. The density of light drops. In other words, the amount of light per square centimeter drops (the number of square centimeters increases, while the total amount of light stays the same).

The same is true on the earth. When the sun is overhead, the light is falling straight on you, and so more light (and more heat) hit each square centimeter of the ground. When the sun is lower in the sky, the light gets more spread out over the surface of the earth, and less heat (per square centimeter) can be absorbed. Since the earth's axis is tilted, the sun is higher when you are on the part of the earth where the axis points more towards the sun, and lower on the part of the Earth where the axis points away from the sun.

For the Northern Hemisphere, the axis points most toward the sun in June (specifically around June 21), and away from the sun around December 21. This corresponds to the Winter and Summer Solstice (solstice is Latin for "the sun stands"). For the Southern Hemisphere, this is reversed.

For both hemispheres, the earth is 90 degrees away from the sun around March 21 and then again around September 21. This corresponds to the Fall and Spring Equinox (equinox is Latin for "equal night"). Everyplace in the world has about 12 hours of daylight and 12 hours of night

[http://www.weatherquestions.com/Seasons.gif) We can understand this by this image

Vitasta Jain
Feb 11, 2014

The earth has an axis passing through the poles. The thing is this axis is not a vertical line. It is tilted. Therefore different parts of the earth get suns direct rays. This creates a temperature difference and gives us the seasons.

Siva Somayyajula
Feb 1, 2014

Seasonal changes by definition are caused by the tilt of Earth's rotational axis, because the amount of sunlight received depends on the surface's proximity from the Sun.

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