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  2. Polar night - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polar_night

    Polar night is a phenomenon in the northernmost and southernmost regions of Earth where night lasts for more than 24 hours. This occurs only inside the polar circles. [ 1 ] The opposite phenomenon, polar day, or midnight sun, occurs when the Sun remains above the horizon for more than 24 hours. "Night" is understood as the center of the Sun ...

  3. Midnight sun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Midnight_sun

    Midnight sun, also known as polar day, is a natural phenomenon that occurs in the summer months in places north of the Arctic Circle or south of the Antarctic Circle, when the Sun remains visible at the local midnight. When midnight sun is seen in the Arctic, the Sun appears to move from left to right. In Antarctica, the equivalent apparent ...

  4. Axial precession - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axial_precession

    In astronomy, axial precession is a gravity-induced, slow, and continuous change in the orientation of an astronomical body's rotational axis. In the absence of precession, the astronomical body's orbit would show axial parallelism. [ 2 ] In particular, axial precession can refer to the gradual shift in the orientation of Earth 's axis of ...

  5. Cataclysmic pole shift hypothesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cataclysmic_pole_shift...

    The talk pagemay contain suggestions. (March 2018) The cataclysmic pole shift hypothesisis a pseudo-scientificclaim that there have been recent, geologically rapid shifts in the axis of rotationof Earth, causing calamities such as floods and tectonic events[1]or relatively rapid climate changes. There is evidence of precessionand changes in ...

  6. Winter solstice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winter_solstice

    The winter solstice occurs during the hemisphere's winter. In the Northern Hemisphere, this is the December solstice (December 21, December 22, or December 23) and in the Southern Hemisphere, this is the June solstice (June 20, June 21, or June 22). Although the winter solstice itself lasts only a moment, the term also refers to the day on ...

  7. Timeline of the far future - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_far_future

    As Earth's poles precess, Gamma Cephei replaces Polaris as the northern pole star. [13] 10,000 If a failure of the Wilkes Subglacial Basin "ice plug" in the next few centuries were to endanger the East Antarctic Ice Sheet, it would take up to this long to melt completely. Sea levels would rise 3 to 4 metres. [14]

  8. Solstice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solstice

    Also during the June solstice, places on the Arctic Circle (latitude 66.56° north) will see the Sun just on the horizon during midnight, and all places north of it will see the Sun above horizon for 24 hours. That is the midnight sun or midsummer-night sun or polar day.

  9. Solar cycle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_cycle

    During the next cycle, differential rotation converts magnetic energy back from the poloidal to the toroidal field, with a polarity that is opposite to the previous cycle. The process carries on continuously, and in an idealized, simplified scenario, each 11-year sunspot cycle corresponds to a change in the polarity of the Sun's large-scale ...