The 'thermal equator' (also known as "the heat equator") is a belt encircling the
Earth, defined by the set of locations having the highest
mean annual
temperature at each
longitude around the globe. Because local temperatures are sensitive to the
geography of a region, and mountain ranges and ocean currents ensure that smooth temperature gradients (such as might be found if the Earth were uniform in composition and devoid of surface irregularities) are impossible, the location of the thermal equator is not identical to that of the geographic
equator.
The term is less frequently used to describe the belt of maximum temperatures encircling the globe which migrates roughly between the
Tropic of Cancer and the
Tropic of Capricorn, the region known as the
Intertropical convergence zone, as the Earth
orbits the sun.
Still another definition states that the thermal equator is the latitude at which
insolation is identical throughout the year; this is not the same as the astronomical
equator because the Earth reaches
perihelion (the minimum distance from the
Sun in its orbit) in early January and is at
aphelion (maximum distance) in early July; therefore,
insolation is somewhat higher at 0° latitude in January than in July even though the height of the sun (at noon) and the length of day (from sunrise to sunset) is essentially the same. At a few degrees north of the equator the perihelion/aphelion factor is balanced by the fact that the angle of the Sun is slightly more direct, and the days are slightly longer, at the time of the summer
solstice for the Northern Hemisphere (most commonly on
June 21), making the level of
insolation virtually the same in both "summer" and "winter."
External links
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Current temperature map