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farther, at 94,511,923 miles. • We're always farthest from the sun in July during a Northern Hemisphere summer - and closest in January during a Northern Hemisphere winter - and that's a good illustration of the fact that it's not the Earth's distance from the sun that creates the seasons on our world. Instead, the seasons result from Earth's tilt on its axis. Right now, it's summer in the Northern Hemisphere because the northern part of Earth is tilted most toward the sun. • Meanwhile, it's winter in the Southern Hemisphere because the southern part of Earth is tilted most away from the sun. • Why isn't the hottest weather on the year's longest day? • So Earth's varying distance from the sun doesn't create the seasons. But it does affect the length of the seasons. That's because, at our farthest from the sun, like now, Earth is traveling most slowly in its orbit. That makes summer the longest season in the Northern Hemisphere and winter the longest season on the southern half of the globe. • Conversely, winter is the shortest season in the Northern Hemisphere and summer is the shortest in the Southern Hemisphere - in each instance, by nearly 5 days. •
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