willstaruss22
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What would Earth be like with a 45 degree tilt?
The discussion explores the hypothetical scenario of Earth having a 45-degree axial tilt, examining its potential effects on climate, weather patterns, and seasonal variations. Participants consider both theoretical implications and references to existing climate models.
Participants express multiple competing views regarding the climatic effects of a 45-degree tilt, with no consensus reached on the implications for sunlight distribution, temperature changes, or the likelihood of ice ages.
Participants reference various assumptions about Earth's rotation and revolution, the angle of incidence of sunlight, and the historical context of glaciation, which may influence their arguments but remain unresolved in the discussion.
jfizzix said:If Earth had a 45 degree tilt, everything north of 45 degrees (even Seattle, Washington) would technically be in the arctic circle, and everything south of 45 degrees would be in the antarctic circle (which surprisingly adds little more than the southern tips of south America and New Zealand). You could see the midnight sun in Paris on a summer day.
The weather at the poles would also be more extreme. The polar winters would be even harsher than they are now because for months at a time even more land and see would never see sunlight.
willem2 said:But you'll get a lot more sun at the poles on average and less in the tropics.
rbj said:um, no, i don't think that is the case.
assuming that the Earth would continue to spin and continue to revolve around the sun, every spot on Earth would see the sun 50% of the time on average as each spot does now. this is not to say that some spots on Earth don't get a more direct hit from the sun at noon.
willstaruss22 said:What would Earth be like with a 45 degree tilt?
jackmell said:It's precession of the equinoxes would likely also be more extreme. Precession is one factor that has been attributed to the cause of ice ages. See Milankovich Cycles:
http://www.climatedata.info/Forcing/Forcing/milankovitchcycles.html