natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
john9blue wrote:Yeah it's the tilt. But I thought that when one hemi was tilted away for half the year, it received less sunlight as it was rotating, and that's why it was colder. I didn't think the angle mattered... I guess it does though...
Neoteny wrote:Er... it has more to do with the angle radiation from the sun hits the earth. So the tilt of the earth is the most important factor. For example, by your logic, it would get very warm at the poles when the sun is constantly shining, but it really doesn't.
sully800 wrote:Well, this IS all going on the assumption that the earth goes around the sun and not the other way around. Anyone want to debate the other side?
Timminz wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:isaiah40 wrote:
So if the earth is moving away from the sun, that means we are in a global cool down not a global warming scenario right??
Which is why we in the northern hemisphere have winter when we are closer to the sun, instead of further away.
That's a joke, right? I mean, we are further from the sun in the winter, but that's not why it's colder.
sully800 wrote:sully800 wrote:Well, I think we're closest to the sun in about March of every year though I don't know why I remember that. The tilt of the axis (and consequently length of days) is what determines the seasons as you alluded.
Scrap that - March is the equinox but only mid distance for earth-sun.
The earth is closest to the sun in December and furthest from the sun in June.
PLAYER57832 wrote:sully800 wrote:sully800 wrote:Well, I think we're closest to the sun in about March of every year though I don't know why I remember that. The tilt of the axis (and consequently length of days) is what determines the seasons as you alluded.
Scrap that - March is the equinox but only mid distance for earth-sun.
The earth is closest to the sun in December and furthest from the sun in June.
Since you are in the southern hemisphere, yes.
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
jsholty4690 wrote:sully800 wrote:Well, this IS all going on the assumption that the earth goes around the sun and not the other way around. Anyone want to debate the other side?
Y'all are heritics!! And ye will burn in the eternal hell fires for all of eternity for your blaspheming. Where's the Spanish Inquistion when you need it?
PLAYER57832 wrote:Timminz wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:isaiah40 wrote:
So if the earth is moving away from the sun, that means we are in a global cool down not a global warming scenario right??
Which is why we in the northern hemisphere have winter when we are closer to the sun, instead of further away.
That's a joke, right? I mean, we are further from the sun in the winter, but that's not why it's colder.
Actually, the northern hemisphere has winter when we are closer to the sun, not further away. The southern hemisphere has winter when it is further away. Its the tilt of the Earth that determines the season.
jonesthecurl wrote:jsholty4690 wrote:sully800 wrote:Well, this IS all going on the assumption that the earth goes around the sun and not the other way around. Anyone want to debate the other side?
Y'all are heritics!! And ye will burn in the eternal hell fires for all of eternity for your blaspheming. Where's the Spanish Inquistion when you need it?
The fool on the hill
Sees the sun going down
But the eyes in his head
See the world spinning 'round
sully800 wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:sully800 wrote:sully800 wrote:Well, I think we're closest to the sun in about March of every year though I don't know why I remember that. The tilt of the axis (and consequently length of days) is what determines the seasons as you alluded.
Scrap that - March is the equinox but only mid distance for earth-sun.
The earth is closest to the sun in December and furthest from the sun in June.
Since you are in the southern hemisphere, yes.
I'm not quite sure what that means since
a) I'm in the northern hemisphere and
b) months don't depend on hemispheres like the seasons do. The entire earth has December at the same time which is when the earth is closest to the sun (as you originally said)
Timminz wrote:Right. Let me try to clarify what I was saying, again.
During our (northerners) summer, we are closer to the sun than the southern hemisphere is at that same time (due to the tilt, which causes seasons, and all that). During our winter, we are farther from the sun than the southerners are (again, due to the tilt), yet we are closer to the sun than we were during the summer (due to the non-circular orbit).
In summary, in December the northern hemisphere is further, relative to the southern hemisphere, yet closer, relative to the distance in June.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Timminz wrote:Right. Let me try to clarify what I was saying, again.
During our (northerners) summer, we are closer to the sun than the southern hemisphere is at that same time (due to the tilt, which causes seasons, and all that). During our winter, we are farther from the sun than the southerners are (again, due to the tilt), yet we are closer to the sun than we were during the summer (due to the non-circular orbit).
In summary, in December the northern hemisphere is further, relative to the southern hemisphere, yet closer, relative to the distance in June.
Well that disagrees with what I have been taught. I was taught that we are closer to the sun in the winter (make that December).. even with the tilt. The tilt is not enough to compensate for the distance differences in the elliptical orbit. However, the tilt affects the angle of sunlight/the amount of sunlight to hit us. So, even though we are closer in the winter, we get less heating sunlight .. ergo winter.
Timminz wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Timminz wrote:Right. Let me try to clarify what I was saying, again.
During our (northerners) summer, we are closer to the sun than the southern hemisphere is at that same time (due to the tilt, which causes seasons, and all that). During our winter, we are farther from the sun than the southerners are (again, due to the tilt), yet we are closer to the sun than we were during the summer (due to the non-circular orbit).
In summary, in December the northern hemisphere is further, relative to the southern hemisphere, yet closer, relative to the distance in June.
Well that disagrees with what I have been taught. I was taught that we are closer to the sun in the winter (make that December).. even with the tilt. The tilt is not enough to compensate for the distance differences in the elliptical orbit. However, the tilt affects the angle of sunlight/the amount of sunlight to hit us. So, even though we are closer in the winter, we get less heating sunlight .. ergo winter.
pearljamrox2 wrote:I've always wondered if the southern hemisphere people can tell that their feet are actually above their heads, and that they are standing upside down on the bottom of the earth. The blood must really rush to their head, hanging around upside down like that.
jonesthecurl wrote:The daylight side that's in winter is closer to the sun than the night-time side that's in summer...
Timminz wrote:jonesthecurl wrote:The daylight side that's in winter is closer to the sun than the night-time side that's in summer...
Not necessarily.
pearljamrox2 wrote:I've always wondered if the southern hemisphere people can tell that their feet are actually above their heads, and that they are standing upside down on the bottom of the earth. The blood must really rush to their head, hanging around upside down like that.

natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"