Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2008/12/21
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]An interesting footnote is that the natural assumption that the earliest sunset and the latest sunrise would also occur on the day of (or the night before or the morning after) Winter Solstice isn't true, not by a long shot. These occur symmetrically well before and after the Solstice. I remember how surprised I was, years ago, when I learned that, at 40 degrees north latitude, the earliest sunset comes an entire two weeks before the Solstice and the latest sunrise a similar length of time after the Solstice. And the earliest end of evening twilight/onset of night is three days earlier still, likewise the opposite in the morning. The offsets are down to the complex interplay and the asymmetries of the geometry of the Earth's elliptical orbit, the varying speed of the Earth in its orbit, the inclination of the equator to the orbital plane, and the relationship between the point in its orbit where the Earth is nearest the Sun (perihelion, Jan 4--and it's pure coincidence that these two dates are even close to each other) and the point where the plane of the Earth's equator passes furthest north of the Sun (the Winter Solstice, Dec 21). Repeat the above, with appropriate substitutions, for the Summer Solstice. --howard On Dec 21, 2008, at 4:21 AM, Bob W wrote: > At 12:04 GMT today it is the midwinter solstice. The shortest day, the > longest night. That means that from now on the days get longer - > hooray! At > least in the northern hemisphere. > > Here's a reminder of this year's midsummer solstice: > > http://www.web-options.com/Midsummer2008/ > > Olympus E-1, 14-54mm & 11-22mm lenses, FL-36 flash > > Bob > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information