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| Solstice Stone - Stonehenge, UK |
Tomorrow is the Summer Solstice here in the northern
hemisphere which means that on Wednesday we receive more sunlight than any other day
of the year. Naturally, you would
conclude that this date would have the earliest sunrise and latest sunset, no?
Don't jump to conclusions.
Even though the solstice has the greatest amount of daylight - the
earliest sunrise occurs before the solstice and the latest sunset falls
afterward. The occurrence of those
events is dependent upon how far you are from the equator – a function of the
tilt of the Earth on its axis.
Here is
an interesting factoid – I went to the US Naval Observatory Astronomical Applications Department and looked-up the Sunrise and Sunset times for my location here at The
Platz before, during and after the solstice.
June 17 Sunrise 5:03 Am Sunset 8:38 PM
June 18 Sunrise 5:03 AM Sunset 8:38 PM
June 19 Sunrise 5:03 AM Sunset 8:38 PM
June 20 Sunrise 5:03 AM Sunset 8:39 PM
June 21 Sunrise 5:03 AM Sunset 8:39 PM
June 22 Sunrise 5:04 AM Sunset 8:39 PM
June 23 Sunrise 5:04 AM Sunset 8:40 PM
June 24 Sunrise 5:04 AM Sunset 8:40 PM
June 25 Sunrise 5:04 AM Sunset 8:40 PM
Notice that the three dates preceding the solstice
have almost the same amount of daylight. The
implication is that the solstice lasts more than half a week.
What's
the explanation? Does it have something to do with our location being
almost equidistant from the North Pole and Equator? Or is it a
consequence of rounding the precise times?
The notion that the solstice lasts for a few days or a week is a very common perception that even ancient astronomers noted. But mechanically-speaking, it's a beautifully precise illusion caused by trigonometry and orbital mechanics.
The earth orbits the sun in a smooth, continuous curve. Because the earth is tilted on its axis by 23.5 degrees the angle of the sun relative to earth's equator (called solar declination) changes throughout the year. If you plot this change on a graph over 365 days it forms a sine wave.
At the Equinoxes the curve is at its steepest. The sun's position changing rapidly every day meaning you notice significant differences in daylight length from one week to the next.
At the solstices the curve reaches its absolute peak (or trough). In calculus and trigonometry the top of the smooth curve has a slope of zero. As the earth approaches this peak the daily rate of change slows to a crawl.
During the days immediately preceding and following the solstice the difference in length of daylight is measured in seconds (not minutes); consequently, to our everyday clocks and senses it appears static.
While the "effect" of the solstice lingers for about a week, the astronomical event itself happens in a precise fraction of a second. That exact moment is when the earth's axial tilt is inclined closest (or farthest) from the sun. It is a single point in time occurring simultaneously for everyone on earth regardless of time zone. For me that is June 21, 3.25 AM CDT.
Apologies for making your head hurt.