AT THE EQUATOR the daylength differs from one solstice to the other by only two minutes. Year round, the day is 12 hours and 7 minutes long, within a minute.
AT THE TROPIC of CANCER the June sun is up for 20 minutes short of 14 hours. Add the fact that sun passes overhead and the days are very hot, and the nights are not long enough to allow much cooling. The December sun is up for three hours less and does not even reach an altitude of 45° Evenings can be romantic; they are often cool and calm
INSIDE THE ARCTIC CIRCLE at Tromsǿ, the summer Solstice sun has not set for five weeks and will not for a further five. Ten weeks of Midnight Sun and only 2° inside the Arctic Circle.
The December solstice is in the middle of a 7 week period wherein the sun will not be seen
So for any given date, how long is a day on this planet? It depends on the season and the latitude.
Location
|
Latitude
|
Date
|
Day length
|
Time Solar Noon
|
Altitude Solar Noon
|
Quito
|
0°15S
(equator)
|
21 Jun
|
12h 06m 32s
|
12:16
|
66.3°
|
Quito
|
0°15S
|
21 Dec
|
12h 08m 18s
|
12:12
|
66.8°
|
Abu Dhabi
|
24.8°
|
21 Jun
|
13h 39m 11s
|
12:24
|
89.0°
|
Abu Dhabi
|
24.8°
|
22 Dec
|
10h 37m 23s
|
12:21
|
42.1°
|
Tromsǿ (Norway)
|
69.7° N
|
21 Jun
|
24 hours
|
12:46
|
43.8°
|
Tromsǿ
|
69.7° N
|
22 Dec
|
Zero hours
|
11:42
|
1.9° below
|
No comments:
Post a Comment