Upcoming Summer Solstice

summer-solstice-stonehenge

Summer is one of the most popular seasons, and for great reason.  Students have a vacation away from their studies, snow and cold weather stay a distant memory, and we can reemerge to the outdoors without having to wear layers of clothing.  Although the warmer weather starts early for many, the official transition from spring to summer in North America is on June 20th at 22:34 UT (A time zone breakdown: 6:34 p.m. EDT, 5:34 p.m. CDT, 4:34 p.m. MDT, and 3:34 p.m. PDT).

How do we transition through the seasons? The sun does not get hotter, and neither does the Earth orbit closer to the Sun. If those were the cases, then they would discount the seasonal effects differing from the equatorial division-winter in North America is experienced as summer in South America. Think about a globe, ever noticed how it is slightly tilted?  That 23.5° tilt causes the seasons.  See, not all crooked things are bad!

Visual explaination of the Solstices and Equinoxes. Source: National Weather Service
Visual explanation of the Solstices and Equinoxes (not to scale). Source: National Weather Service

The change in seasons depends on both the Earth’s location during its orbit and your geographical location on Earth. The Earth’s tilt does not change, but depending on the planet’s orbital position around the Sun, either the northern or the southern hemisphere receives more direct solar ray beams than the other hemisphere. When the Earth’s northern hemisphere appears most angled towards the Sun, summer has begun for us.  On the flip side, this implies that the southern hemisphere is angled away from the Sun due to the 23.5° tilt, and therefore experiences a winter solstice.

Credit: John Stetson
Credit: John Stetson

The summer solstice also means the Sun will reach its highest point in the sky, known as the maximum northerly declination.  Since the Earth orbits the Sun in a relatively constant path known as the ecliptic, if you were to graph the position of the Sun at a specific time (for example, noon) and place every day of the year, the resulting chart would appear like a wavelength.  The 23.5° tilt of Earth not only accounts for the change in seasons, but also the position of the Sun in the sky, and thus the length of the day.

Diagram: Bob King; Source: Stellarium
Depiction of the annual ecliptic path of the Sun in the sky. Diagram: Bob King; Source: Stellarium

Comment below any questions or thoughts on the summer solstice!

Keep looking up,

-Julia

*Side note: I apologize to my readers for not posting in nearly two months.  As a junior in high school, AP exams, research projects, and finals dragged on until the end of the year. Since I’m now on break, expect more regular posts and updates 🙂 Happy summer vacation to my fellow students- congrats on surviving the school year!

 

(Sources: Sky and Telescope, NASA)