Asked by jackson
Answer the task card below.
image.png
Group of answer choices
Northern Hemisphere: Location A / Southern Hemisphere: Location B / Equator: Location C
Northern Hemisphere: Location B / Southern Hemisphere: Location A / Equator: Location C
Northern Hemisphere: Location B / Southern Hemisphere: Location C / Equator: Location A
Northern Hemisphere: Location C / Southern Hemisphere: Location C / Equator: Location B
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
I don't have the image — could you re-upload it or describe what A, B and C show (shadows, stars, sun position, map labels, etc.)?
If you want to identify hemisphere yourself, here are quick checks you can use from common clues in such diagrams:
- Sun at local noon:
- If the Sun is due south (shadows point north), you're in the Northern Hemisphere.
- If the Sun is due north (shadows point south), you're in the Southern Hemisphere.
- If the Sun is directly overhead at noon (no shadow), you are on the Equator (or at the subsolar point).
- Night-sky clues:
- Polaris (the North Star) visible above the horizon → Northern Hemisphere.
- Southern Cross visible and Polaris absent → Southern Hemisphere.
- Both might be low on horizon near the Equator.
- Seasonal illumination on a globe or map:
- If tilt shows Northern Hemisphere receiving more direct sunlight (longer day) → it’s summertime in the Northern Hemisphere.
- If Southern Hemisphere receives more direct sunlight → Southern Hemisphere.
Send the image or describe what A, B, and C depict and I’ll pick the correct option.
If you want to identify hemisphere yourself, here are quick checks you can use from common clues in such diagrams:
- Sun at local noon:
- If the Sun is due south (shadows point north), you're in the Northern Hemisphere.
- If the Sun is due north (shadows point south), you're in the Southern Hemisphere.
- If the Sun is directly overhead at noon (no shadow), you are on the Equator (or at the subsolar point).
- Night-sky clues:
- Polaris (the North Star) visible above the horizon → Northern Hemisphere.
- Southern Cross visible and Polaris absent → Southern Hemisphere.
- Both might be low on horizon near the Equator.
- Seasonal illumination on a globe or map:
- If tilt shows Northern Hemisphere receiving more direct sunlight (longer day) → it’s summertime in the Northern Hemisphere.
- If Southern Hemisphere receives more direct sunlight → Southern Hemisphere.
Send the image or describe what A, B, and C depict and I’ll pick the correct option.
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