Why Summer Happens
Imagine Earth is like a spinning top, it spins around the Sun once every year. But Earth isn’t perfectly straight; it’s tilted, like when you lean back in your chair to take a deep breath. When Earth tilts toward the Sun, that side gets more sunlight, and we call that summer. It's like standing under a bright lamp, you feel warmer and can play outside longer.
What Is the Summer Solstice?
The summer solstice is the day when Earth is tilted just right toward the Sun, it’s the longest day of the year! Think about your favorite playground: on this day, you have more time to swing, slide, and run before the sun goes down. After that, days slowly get shorter again as Earth keeps spinning.
How Seasons Work
Seasons happen because of Earth's tilt and its path around the Sun. When one side gets more sunlight, it’s summer there; when it gets less, it’s winter. It’s like having two sides to a blanket, one side is warm, the other is cool. As Earth keeps spinning, we switch between warm and cool, giving us all four seasons!
Examples
- Imagine the Earth is like a spinning top, tilted on its side as it goes around the Sun, that's why we have summer.
- During summer solstice, the Northern Hemisphere gets more sunlight and longer days because of the tilt.
- Kids can feel summer by playing outside all day when it's warm and bright.
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See also
- How Do Volcanoes Shape Landforms?
- How Do Volcanoes Shape Landscapes?
- How Does Seasons and the Sun: Crash Course Kids 11.1 Work?
- How Does The Rhythm Pattern Behind Nature's Rise and Fall Work?
- How Does the Earth's Rotation Affect Time Zones Exactly?