Search results for “solar year”

Solar and lunar year

Ancient Greek scholars knew the difference between solar and lunar years. While the earth orbits the sun once in a year, the moon orbits the earth about 12 times. Author: ZDF/Terra X/Tobias Schultes/WENDEVARGA Translation & dubbing: alugha Click here to see more videos: https://alugha.com/TerraX

Why Do We Have Leap Years?

Every four years, we get an extra day in February. Who decided this, and what's the point? Follow Us! https://twitter.com/LifeNoggin https://facebook.com/LifeNoggin Click here to see more videos: https://alugha.com/LifeNoggin Life Noggin is a weekly animated educational series. Whether it's scie

13 Cool New Year Party Hacks For You

Subscribe Here: https://bit.ly/2roHKoB It’s snowing and cold outside, and at home reigns New Year's mood! And that means you need to have a fun party! Rather, call your friends to have a good time! And our new video will help you organize a cool Christmas or New Year party easily and simply! Suppli

What If A Massive Solar Flare Hit Us?

The sun is great. The sun is our friend. The sun allows us to keep on living. Basically everything you know and love you can thank the sun for. But the sun is a fickle beast. We are entirely at the suns mercy, and sometimes, our fiery mate kicks off out there. Click here to see more videos: https:/

Sun and lunar year

Ancient Greek scholars knew the difference between the solar and lunar year. While the earth revolves around the sun once in the course of a year, the moon revolves around the earth about twelve times. Author: ZDF/Terra X/Tobias Schultes/WENDEVARGA Translation and dubbing: alugha Click here to wa

The Solar System's Boundaries | NASA Planetary Sciences

Discover what happens at the outer edges of our solar system, where the solar wind interacts with interstellar space. The Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) is a mission to study the boundary between the solar system and interstellar space. Voyager 1 and 2 have provided some direct measurements f

ScienceCasts: Solar Minimum is Coming

Intense solar activity such as sunspots and solar flares subsides during solar minimum, but that doesn’t mean the sun becomes dull. Solar activity simply changes form. Click here to see more videos: https://alugha.com/NASA Visit http://science.nasa.gov/ for more.