1 / 36

EARTH , SUN, and Moon Interactions

EARTH , SUN, and Moon Interactions. Understanding Climate and Weather What? Why and How?. Guide Questions . Why do we have night and day? What is a day/year? How does sunlight hit the Earth’s surface? (equator, poles) Why is it warmer at the equator and colder at the poles?

pahana
Télécharger la présentation

EARTH , SUN, and Moon Interactions

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. EARTH , SUN, andMoonInteractions

  2. Understanding Climate and Weather What?Why and How?

  3. Guide Questions • Why do we have night and day? • What is a day/year? • How does sunlight hit the Earth’s surface? (equator, poles) • Why is it warmer at the equator and colder at the poles? • Why are there seasons?

  4. What causes Night and Day?

  5. Length of Day: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dCyTNpcDTUM&feature=related

  6. DAY AND YEAR

  7. DAY AND YEAR Rotation earth’s spinning on its axis 1,600 km/hr (rate of spin at any point along the equator) Revolution movement of earth around the sun

  8. Leap Year • It actually takes the Earth a little longer than a year to travel around the Sun — 365 days, 5 hours, 48 minutes, and 46 seconds, to be exact. • It was the ancient Egyptians who first figured out that the solar year and the man-made calendar year didn't always match up. • It was the Romans who first designated February 29 as leap day • That extra day was added to February because February used to be thelast month of the year http://www.chiff.com/a/leap-year.htm

  9. When do we have leap years? • a leap day happens in years only divisible by four, i.e., 1996, 2000, 2004 • Another stipulation ruled that no year divisible by 100 would have a leap year, except if it was divisible by 400. Thus, 1900 was not a leap year ... but 2000 was! Go figure.

  10. Leap Years • When was the last leap year? 2008 • When is the next? 2012

  11. Number of Daylight Hours • Every part of Earth gets about the same number of hours of daylight per year • half a year of full daylight • BUT, not received the same way • EQUATOR: it is delivered evenly -- exactly half a day, every single day, throughout the year. • POLES: it is delivered all at once -- half a year of daylight, and then half a year of darkness. • MIDLATITUDES: it is delivered in greater or lesser amounts, throughout the year -- some days having more than half a day of daylight, but others, half a year later, having less than half a day, and the average, throughout the year, being half a day of daylight per day

  12. AMOUNT OF SUNSHINE • However, although the different regions receive the same number of hours of daylight, they do NOT receive the same amount of sunshine • the amount of sunshine which is received over a certain amount of the ground depends upon how high the Sun is in the sky (the angle of the sun’s rays)

  13. When sunlight shines from overhead (on left), one square foot of sunlight falls on one square foot of ground. When it shines at a shallow angle (on right), each square foot of sunlight spreads out over many feet of ground. http://cseligman.com/text/sky/climate.htm

  14. Geography basics http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=95TtXYjOEv4 9 mins

  15. March Equinox June Solstice December Solstice Sun September Equinox

  16. Earth Motions: PRECESSION • Precession – Earth’s axis maintains approximately the same angle of tilt, but the direction in which the axis points continually changes. • Currently, the axis points toward Polaris. • In the year 14,000, it will point toward Vega. • By 28,000, it will point toward Polaris again.

  17. SEASONS • We have seasons because: • The Earth’s axis is tilted 23.5o, so different locations receive different amounts of direct sunlight throughout the year. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=000-3JYM0NI&feature=related

  18. SOLSTICE http://members.shaw.ca/len92/geography.htm

  19. Peralta Colleges, Physical Geography

  20. FACTORS THAT AFFECT CLIMATE • Axis or tilt of the Earth • Latitude • Elevation • Precipitation • Currents (wind, water)

  21. The latitude and longitude system Longitude lines run north-south and meet at the North and South Poles; also called meridians. Latitude lines run east-west and don't meet; also called parallels.

  22. Latitude • The latitude of a country is its angle above or below the equator. • For example • North Pole - 90° North • South Pole - 90° South • Paris, France - 48° North • Sydney, Australia - 34° South

  23. Latitude Paris 48° Equator

  24. Latitude • Some important lines of latitude include • The Equator – 0° • The Tropic of Cancer – 23.5° N • The Tropic of Capricorn – 23.5° S • The Arctic Circle – 66.5° N • The Antarctic Circle – 66.5° S

  25. Longitude The longitude of a country is how far around the earth it lies from London. For example Manila - 120° East New York - 74° West The time zones follow lines of longitude that are every 15° away from London

  26. Longitude London New York

  27. TIME ZONES Time zones: Every 15˚, changes by 1 hour

  28. Climate change due to a country’s location • Latitude effect on seasonal change • day-light hours • precipitation levels (rainfall and snowfall) • average (and max, min) temperatures • crop growth • tourism • ecosystems • cultural changes due to climate differences (e.g. S.A.D also known as winter blues)

  29. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5r3OufiIp5Y

  30. Peralta Colleges, Physical Geography

More Related