Solar radiation is measurable and can be used
to determine the length of daylight. The number of daylight hours
changes throughout the year because of the tilt of the earth.
Objectives
Objectives
- To expand the students' understanding of the seasons.
- To learn how the length of the day changes throughout the year.
- The time series graphs should be for the solstices, equinoxes, and several intermediate dates (e.g., one graph per month for a year, sunny days preferably). Give each graph a number, but do not put them in a particular order.
| PROCEDURE 1. Answer the questions below for each of the graphs. Write your answers on the Student Observation Sheet.
1. Which solar radiation graph represents the day with the greatest hours of sunlight? 2. In what season are the hours of daylight the longest? 3. Which solar radiation graph represents the day with the fewest hours of daylight? 4. In what season are the hours of daylight the shortest? 5. Which graph (or graphs) represents a day (or days) with an equal number of hours of daylight and of darkness? 6. What kind of information can time series data of solar radiation show us about differences between the seasons? DISCUSSION 1. Each graph represents a different month of the year. Using the data that you have collected on your Observation Sheet, hypothesize which graph represents which month of the year. Record your hypotheses on the Observation Sheet. 2. Explain how your group determined which graphs represented days during the summer and which graphs represented days during the winter. 3. Students should record their group data on the board or overhead so that comparisons may be made. |
PREREQUISITES
(Per group):
Autumnal equinox Solar radiation Summer solstice Vernal equinox Winter solstice CORE CURRICULUM SKILLS APPLIED IN THIS LESSON
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