>>13207271That doesn't make sense. In this model the light coming from 93 million miles should have no problem heating the southern hemisphere as well.
But amazingly the closer you get to the sun the colder it gets. The balloon footage that came very close to the sun was recorded with a -50 degrees Celsius temperature. The sun was in direct view. And it's also weird that in high mountains the snow is always there and doesn't melt, while the valleys have no snow and are warm. The reason for that is the difference in density. Upper areas have less density, ground areas have high density, the light warms up dense air but not so much in higher altitudes.
And does this webm related look like it's 93 million miles away? Look at the sun beams, with a little understanding of geometry you don't even have to calculate to know it's not that far away.