Geosystems Chapter 2
Perihelion
Closest position from the Sun Earth is there during the Northern Hemisphere winter on January 3rd.
Sunrise
The moment when the disk of the Sun first appears above the horizon in the east.
Revolution
Earth's orbital revolution around the sun.
Declination
Latitude of the sub solar point
Earth's Orbit
Around the Sun is presently elliptical--a closed, oval path
Speed of Light
300,000 kmps or 186,000 mps Light-year is known as the unit of measurement for the vast Universe.
Axil tilt
A flat surface that intersects Earth's elliptical orbit about the Sun, with half of the Sun and Earth above the plane and half below.
Milky Way Galaxy
A flattened, disk-shaped mass in the form of a barred-spiral--a spiral with a slightly barred or elongated core of stars.
Altitude
Angle between the horizon and the Sun
Daylength
Duration of exposure to insolation. Varies during the year depending on latitude.
Fall Equinox
Earth's orientation is such that the circle of illumination again passes through both poles so that all parts of the globe experience a 12-hour day and a 12-hour night.
Solar wind
Electrically charged particles emitted from the sun that surge outwards in all directions from the Sun's surface.
Aphelion
Farthest position from the Sun. Earth is there during the Northern Hemisphere summer on July 4th.
Axis
Imaginary line extending through the planet from the geographic North Pole to the South Pole
Summer Solstice
June 20 or 21. The sub solar point migrates from the equator to the Tropic of Cancer. Because the circle of illumination now includes the North Polar region, everything north of the Arctic Circle receives 24 hours of daylight.
Spring Equinox
March 20 or 21. The circle of illumination passes through both poles so that all locations on Earth experience a 12-hour night.
Aurora borealis
Northern Lights
Electromagnetic spectrum
Occupies by a portion of solar radiation. The radiant energy travels at the speed of light to earth. The radiant energy is made up of different wave lengths.
Plane of the ecliptic
Plane touching all points of Earth's orbit.
Insolation
Solar radiation that reaches a horizontal plane at Earth. Radiation arriving at Earth's atmosphere and surface.
Aurora australis
Southern Lights
Tropic of Cancer
Sun's declination is at its position farthest north.
Tropic of Capricorn
Sun's declination is at its position farthest south.
Fusion
The Sun's abundant hydrogen atoms are forced together and pairs of hydrogen nuclei are joined.
Solar Constant
The average insolation received at the thermopause when Earth is at its average distance from the Sun
Winter Solstice
The circle of illumination excludes the North Pole but includes the South Pole.
Axial parallelism
The condition of comparing axis in different months and them always appearing parallel to itself
Wavelength
The distance between corresponding points on any two successive waves. Frequency. The Sun's radiated energy is shortwave radiation that peaks in the short visible wavelengths. Earth's radiated energy is long wave radiation concentrated in infrared wavelengths.
Circle of illumination
The dividing line between day and night. At the equator it is evenly divided. Because the day-night dividing circle of illumination intersects the equator.
Sunset
The moment when the Sun totally disappears below the horizon in the west.
Subsolar Point
The only point receiving insolation perpendicular to the surface (from directly overhead).
Thermopause
The region at the top of the atmosphere, approximately 480km above Earth's surface. The outer boundary of Earth's energy system.
Rotation
Turning on its axis. Complex motion that averages slightly less than 24 hours in duration. Determine daylength