The angle that the Sun creates with the ground, not the tilt's distance, determines how things turn out.
At mid-latitudes, the intensity of the sunlight at noon on the winter solstice is half or less of what it is at noon on the summer solstice, while the distance between perihelion and aphelion amounts to around a 6.7% difference in the intensity of the sunlight. Winters are cold because of that as well as shorter days.
The northern summer, which occurs when the Earth is furthest from the Sun for half of the year, tilts the northern hemisphere toward the Sun, bringing much more sunshine than the southern winter. And the south experiences the opposite during the remaining six months of the year when the south faces the Sun! During the winter months in the north, the south receives more sunlight in its summer regions.
Know more about seasons at:
https://brainly.com/question/15734021
#SPJ4