(ii) In which one of the following cities, are the days the longest?
(a) Tiruvanantpuram
(b) Chandigarh
(c) Hyderabad
(d) Nagpur
Ans: (b)
Explanation: Day length varies with latitude; higher latitudes in the Northern Hemisphere have longer summer days. Among the listed cities, Chandigarh is at the highest latitude and therefore experiences the longest daylight hours, especially around the summer months.
(iii) The atmosphere is mainly heated by the:
(a) Short wave solar radiation
(b) Reflected solar radiation
(c) Long wave terrestrial radiation
(d) Scattered solar radiation
Ans: (c)
Explanation: The Sun supplies shortwave radiation to the Earth-atmosphere system, but much of the atmosphere is warmed by longwave (infra-red) radiation emitted from the heated surface. The surface absorbs solar energy and re-radiates it as longwave radiation, which is then absorbed by atmospheric gases and clouds, warming the atmosphere.
(iv) Make correct pairs from the following two columns.

Ans:

(v) The main reason that the earth experiences highest temperatures in the subtropics in the northern hemisphere rather than at the equator is:
(a) Subtropical areas tend to have less cloud cover than equatorial areas.
(b) Subtropical areas have longer day hours in the summer than the equatorial.
(c) Subtropical areas have an enhanced "green house effect" compared to equatorial areas.
(d) Subtropical areas are nearer to the oceanic areas than the equatorial locations.
Ans: (a)
Explanation: Many subtropical regions (around 25°-35° latitude) are dominated by descending dry air and clear skies, which reduce cloud cover and allow more solar radiation to reach the surface. This greater incoming shortwave radiation and reduced evaporative cooling often produce higher surface temperatures than at the equator, where persistent cloudiness and convection limit surface heating.
(ii) What are the factors that control temperature distribution on the surface of the earth?
Ans: The factors that control temperature distribution on the surface of the earth are:
(iii) In India, why is the day temperature maximum in May and why not after the summer solstice?
Ans: In India the highest daytime temperatures usually occur in May because the land has been heating through the pre-monsoon period under clear skies. After the summer solstice, the southwest monsoon advances, bringing clouds, rain and increased humidity that reduce daytime insolation and cause temperatures to fall.
(iv) Why is the annual range of temperature high in the Siberian plains?
Ans: The Siberian plains are far from oceanic influence and have a continental climate; very cold winters (often well below -20°C) and comparatively warm summers (above 10°C) produce a very large annual temperature range.
(ii) Discuss the processes through which the earth-atmosphere system maintains heat balance.
Ans:
Together these processes - radiation, conduction, convection, advection and latent/sensible heat transfers and interactions with land, ocean and clouds maintain the dynamic heat balance of the earth-atmosphere system.
(iii) Compare the global distribution of temperature in January over the northern and the southern hemisphere of the earth.
Ans: In January the Northern Hemisphere is in winter and the Southern Hemisphere in summer, producing contrasting temperature patterns. The Northern Hemisphere has a larger land area, and land cools and warms more rapidly than ocean; hence isotherms show greater distortion and larger temperature contrasts over continents. Cold continental masses in Eurasia and North America push isotherms toward lower latitudes. Over the North Atlantic, warm ocean currents (Gulf Stream and North Atlantic Drift) raise sea temperatures and bend isotherms poleward. In the Southern Hemisphere, oceans dominate and temperatures vary more gradually; isotherms are more nearly parallel to the latitudes because maritime influence moderates extremes. Thus, January isotherms reflect strong continentality and sharper gradients in the north, and milder, smoother patterns in the south, illustrated by the southward progression of similar temperature lines at higher latitudes (for example, 20°C, 10°C and 0°C isotherms occur farther poleward in the southern oceanic regions).
| 1. What is solar radiation and how does it impact the Earth's temperature? | ![]() |
| 2. How does the Earth maintain heat balance despite receiving solar radiation? | ![]() |
| 3. What factors affect the temperature of a particular region on Earth? | ![]() |
| 4. How does the greenhouse effect contribute to the Earth's temperature regulation? | ![]() |
| 5. How do scientists measure solar radiation and its impact on the Earth's temperature? | ![]() |