Draw a circle and then make about seven to eight lines coming out from the circle that you made.
you could draw a sun in the middle of the paper. Next you could draw a circle on both sides of the sun. Then draw your equator pun when you draw the poles make sure they are in different directions. the pole face away from the sun is a winter solstice and the one pointing toward the sun is the summer solstice.
if you line in England, draw the sun and lots of rain.
Draw a sun and a moon and tape them to shirts...
you can draw climate by drawing land with sun over it or water with a moon over it
With the moon between the Earth and the sun.
because it is too hot
They went out to draw their shadows because they can see their shadow when the sun is shinning above them.
I like to draw
It's hard to show without using a diagram (and I can't post one sorry), but the answer is No. Try this. Draw two circles of different sizes for the Sun and Earth (the smaller one). Draw a line from the top of the Sun to the top of the Earth and extend it beyond the Earth. Now draw a line form the bottom of the Sun to the bottom of the Earth and extend it. Those two lines will intersect and form a triangle (with a rounded base of the Earth). This is the Umbra. Now draw a line form the top of the Sun to the bottom of the earth and extend it. Draw another line form the bottom of the Sun to the top of the Earth and extend it. This will form an open-ended shape. This is the umbra. As Hilmar said above, the umbra and penumbra form because the Sun is not a point source.
temperature, orbit...........................
It's hard to show without using a diagram (and I can't post one sorry), but the answer is No. Try this. Draw two circles of different sizes for the Sun and Earth (the smaller one). Draw a line from the top of the Sun to the top of the Earth and extend it beyond the Earth. Now draw a line form the bottom of the Sun to the bottom of the Earth and extend it. Those two lines will intersect and form a triangle (with a rounded base of the Earth). This is the Umbra. Now draw a line form the top of the Sun to the bottom of the earth and extend it. Draw another line form the bottom of the Sun to the top of the Earth and extend it. This will form an open-ended shape. This is the umbra. As Hilmar said above, the umbra and penumbra form because the Sun is not a point source.
The question doesn't make much sense. The Earth is always"lined up" with the Sun, in the sense that you can always draw a line through two points.The question doesn't make much sense. The Earth is always"lined up" with the Sun, in the sense that you can always draw a line through two points.The question doesn't make much sense. The Earth is always"lined up" with the Sun, in the sense that you can always draw a line through two points.The question doesn't make much sense. The Earth is always"lined up" with the Sun, in the sense that you can always draw a line through two points.