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Unit 4 Lesson 1 Earth’s Days, Years, and Seasons

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1 Unit 4 Lesson 1 Earth’s Days, Years, and Seasons
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company 1

2 Unit 4 Lesson 1 Earth’s Days, Years, and Seasons
Florida Benchmark SC.8.E.5.9 Explain the impact of objects in space on each other including: 1. The Sun on the Earth including seasons and gravitational attraction, 2. The Moon on the Earth, including phases, tides, and eclipses, and the relative position of each body. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company 2

3 Spinning in Circles What determines the length of a day?
Unit 4 Lesson 1 Earth’s Days, Years, and Seasons Spinning in Circles What determines the length of a day? Each planet spins on its axis. The spinning of a body, such as a planet, on its axis is called rotation. The time it takes a planet to complete one full rotation on its axis is called a day. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company 3

4 What determines the length of a day?
Unit 4 Lesson 1 Earth’s Days, Years, and Seasons What determines the length of a day? Earth rotates in a counterclockwise motion around its axis when viewed from above the North Pole. As a location on Earth’s equator rotates from west to east, the sun appears to rise in the east, cross the sky, and set in the west. Only one-half of Earth faces the sun at any given time. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company 4

5 What determines the length of a day?
Unit 4 Lesson 1 Earth’s Days, Years, and Seasons What determines the length of a day? People on the half of Earth facing the sun experience daylight, and this period is called daytime. People on the half of Earth facing away from the sun experience darkness, and this period is called nighttime. Earth completes one rotation on its axis in 24 hours, or one day. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company 5

6 What determines the length of a year?
Unit 4 Lesson 1 Earth’s Days, Years, and Seasons What determines the length of a year? As Earth rotates on its axis, it also revolves around the sun. The motion of a body that travels around another body in space is called revolution. Earth completes a full revolution around the sun in 365 ¼ days, or about one year. We have divided the year into 12 months, each lasting 28 to 31 days. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company 6

7 Tilt-a-Whirl What conditions are affected by the tilt of Earth’s axis?
Unit 4 Lesson 1 Earth’s Days, Years, and Seasons Tilt-a-Whirl What conditions are affected by the tilt of Earth’s axis? Earth’s axis is tilted at 23.5°. During each revolution, the North Pole may be tilted toward the sun or away from the sun. When the North Pole is tilted toward the sun, the Northern Hemisphere has longer periods of daylight than does the Southern Hemisphere. When the North Pole is tilted away from the sun, the opposite is true. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company 7

8 What conditions are affected by the tilt of Earth’s axis?
Unit 4 Lesson 1 Earth’s Days, Years, and Seasons What conditions are affected by the tilt of Earth’s axis? The angle at which the sun’s rays strike each part of Earth’s surface changes as Earth moves in its orbit. When the North Pole is tilted toward the sun, the sun’s rays strike the Northern Hemisphere more directly, and this region is warmer. When the North Pole is tilted away from the sun, the sun’s rays strike the Northern Hemisphere less directly, and this region is cooler. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company 8

9 What conditions are affected by the tilt of Earth’s axis?
Unit 4 Lesson 1 Earth’s Days, Years, and Seasons What conditions are affected by the tilt of Earth’s axis? The spherical shape of Earth also affects how the sun warms up an area. At a point near the equator, the sun’s rays hit Earth’s surface more directly, so temperatures are higher there. At a point near one of the poles, the sun’s rays hit Earth’s surface less directly, so temperatures are lower there. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company 9

10 Seasons change … What causes seasons?
Unit 4 Lesson 1 Earth’s Days, Years, and Seasons Seasons change … What causes seasons? Most locations on Earth experience seasons. Each season is characterized by a pattern of temperature and other weather trends. We experience seasons due to changes in the intensity of sunlight and the number of daylight hours as Earth revolves around the sun. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company 10

11 Unit 4 Lesson 1 Earth’s Days, Years, and Seasons
What causes seasons? At an equinox, sunlight shines equally on the Northern and Southern hemispheres. Half of each hemisphere is lit, and half is in darkness. As Earth moves along its orbit, the sunlight reaches more of one hemisphere than the other. At a solstice, the area of sunlight is at a maximum in one hemisphere and at a minimum in the other hemisphere. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company 11

12 Now answer your essential question
How are Earth’s days, years, and seasons related to the way Earth moves in space? **Remember to use your textual sentence starters to answer your EQ!


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