3821084
Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: OBJETIVA
Orgão: Pref. Guadalupe-PE
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: OBJETIVA
Orgão: Pref. Guadalupe-PE
Provas:
What's the Difference Between a Solstice and an Equinox?
You may know that the solstices and equinoxes
signal the changing of the seasons on Earth, but do you
remember which is which? Are they just different names for
the same thing? Actually, a solstice and an equinox are sort
of opposites.
The seasons on Earth change because the planet is
slightly tilted on its axis as it travels around the Sun. This
means different points on Earth receive more or less sunlight
at different times of year. If Earth were not tilted, the Sun
would always appear to be directly above the Equator, the
amount of light a given location receives would be fixed, and
there would be no seasons. There also would be no need to
mark equinoxes or solstices.
The two solstices happen in June (20 or 21) and
December (21 or 22). These are the days when the Sun’s
path in the sky is the farthest north or south from the
Equator. A hemisphere’s winter solstice is the shortest day
of the year and its summer solstice the year’s longest. In the
Northern Hemisphere the June solstice marks the start of
summer: this is when the North Pole is tilted closest to the
Sun, and the Sun’s rays are directly overhead at the Tropic of
Cancer. The December solstice marks the start of winter: at
this point the South Pole is tilted closest to the Sun, and the
Sun’s rays are directly overhead at the Tropic of Capricorn.
(In the Southern Hemisphere the seasons are reversed.)
The equinoxes happen in March (about March 21)
and September (about September 23). These are the days
when the Sun is exactly above the Equator, which makes day
and night of equal length.
Encyclopaedia Britannica. Adaptation.