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Question
why are the arctic and antarctic circles located at the latitudes they are? hint: use math- north pole and tilt
The Arctic Circle (latitude ~66.5°N) and Antarctic Circle (latitude ~66.5°S) exist due to Earth’s axial tilt (about 23.5° from the perpendicular to its orbital plane). The Arctic Circle is the southernmost latitude where the Sun doesn’t set on the summer solstice (or rise on the winter solstice), and the Antarctic Circle is the northernmost latitude with similar polar day/night phenomena. This is calculated as \(90^\circ - 23.5^\circ = 66.5^\circ\) (for both hemispheres, with N/S distinction). The tilt causes the Sun’s apparent path to vary, creating regions with 24 - hour daylight or darkness, defining these circles.
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The Arctic (≈66.5°N) and Antarctic (≈66.5°S) circles exist because Earth’s axial tilt (≈23.5°) creates latitudes where polar day/night (24 - hour sun or darkness) occurs. Mathematically, \(90^\circ - 23.5^\circ = 66.5^\circ\) (latitude for these circles), marking the boundary of regions with such extreme solar phenomena due to the tilt’s effect on the Sun’s apparent path.