Difference between revisions of "Perihelion"
(New page: ==Definition== The point in which a body's orbit makes it's closest approach to the Sun. Category:Orbital Mechanics) |
(→Notes: More discussion on why northern summers are warm & southern winters are cold.) |
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==Definition== | ==Definition== | ||
+ | '''The point at which a body's orbit makes it's closest approach to the Sun.''' | ||
− | The point | + | The point at which a body's orbit is farthest from the Sun is known as [[Aphelion]] |
+ | ==Notes== | ||
− | [[Category: | + | Martian perihelion is during the southern hemisphere's summer. Since Mars has a fairly elliptical orbit, this means that the southern summer is short, and the southern winter is longer (than the northern hemisphere). |
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+ | The difference between the insolation between when Mars is closest to the sun, and when it is farthest away is 40%. (Earth is 6% because its orbit is more circular.) | ||
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+ | So the Southern Hemisphere has summer when Mars is closest to the Sun, which makes it hotter. However, the summer is short, and the winter (when it never sees the sun) is long. This dominates the temperature differential, northern summers are warm, and southern winters are brutally cold. | ||
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+ | [[Category:Orbit]] |
Latest revision as of 11:56, 16 November 2024
Definition
The point at which a body's orbit makes it's closest approach to the Sun.
The point at which a body's orbit is farthest from the Sun is known as Aphelion
Notes
Martian perihelion is during the southern hemisphere's summer. Since Mars has a fairly elliptical orbit, this means that the southern summer is short, and the southern winter is longer (than the northern hemisphere).
The difference between the insolation between when Mars is closest to the sun, and when it is farthest away is 40%. (Earth is 6% because its orbit is more circular.)
So the Southern Hemisphere has summer when Mars is closest to the Sun, which makes it hotter. However, the summer is short, and the winter (when it never sees the sun) is long. This dominates the temperature differential, northern summers are warm, and southern winters are brutally cold.