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**paragraph 1**

When it's is tilted towards the sun it is *Summer solstice* and when it is away from the sun it is *winter solstice*

There are four seasons: summer, winter, autumn and spring. Generally speaking, it is warmer in the summer than in the winter. Autumn and spring are intermediate seasons.

Seasons change due to the revolution of the earth around the sun. For instance, during the winter season in the Northern Hemisphere, the North Pole faces away from the sun, so the areas in the northern hemisphere get less light than during the summer when the North Pole faces towards the sun. With less solar radiation, the Northern Hemisphere is cooler during the winter than during the summer. This process is reversed in the Southern Hemisphere. So winter in the Northern Hemisphere is summer in the Southern.

**paragraph 2**

Equinox is the position of the earth on 21st March and 23rd September. Both the hemispheres experience equal day and equal night.

solstice: the time or date (twice each year) at which the sun reaches its maximum or minimum declination, marked by the longest and shortest days (about 21 June and 22 December).

We have 24 hours during both the solstices (summer and winter)

the hours change due to better light and night forms.

Most years, this happens on either Sept. 22 or 23. However, every once in a while, the autumn equinox can occur on Sept. ... "Because of leap years, the dates of the equinoxes and solstices can shift by a day or two over time, causing the start dates of the seasons to shift, too," according to The Old Farmer's Almanac.

You can do the paragraph 3 by yourself, I'm not sure about that..

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