Along the equator.
Earth gets 24 hours of sunlight each day. There is always 50% of the Earth illuminated by the sun.
That's close to Nairobi - according to Google Earth.
the sunlight beneath the earth
Slightly less than 50%. Without an atmosphere, it would be 50% but diffraction of sunlight in the earth's atmosphere means that sunlight "wraps around" the termonator - giving us dusk and twilight. These are periods when it is light even though the sun is not visible.
The parallel of zero latitude on the earth is usually referred to as the earth's 'equator'.
The angel of the sunlight determine how much they heat up the earth. The axel of the earth is tilted 23.5 degrees in relation ship to the sun. This is what gives us the different seasons. When the angel is wide a specific amount of sunlight will be spread out over a big area and each part is only heated up a little. When the angel is narrow the same amount of sunlight is concentrated on a smaller area and that area is heated up much more.
23.5 degree
Earth's rate of revolution around the sun is very close to 1 degree per day.
a direct ray is where the sun light hits the earth at a 90 degree angle so the angle of sunlight is perpendicular to the earths surface
Earth Angel was created in 1954.
Sunlight experiences some degree of scattering (technically, Rayleigh Scattering) as it passes through the atmosphere, which causes the sky to appear blue and the sunlight to appear yellow. Some of the sunlight encounters clouds, while some reaches the ground.
explain the effects of the sunlight striking earth
Sunlight that hits the Earth's surface is absorbed by the Earth. It is then reflected back.
the earth is heated by the sunlight and it affects it by it being too hot when the sunlight is shining on earth.
On average the earth reflects about 30% of the incident sunlight.
By the sunlight, when the sunlight enter in the earth
At any given time, half (50%) of Earth is exposed to sunlight.