Monday, December 22, 2014

Happy Winter Solstice

Yesterday was the Winter Solstice; the day the sun stops and stands still in its voyage south and then starts north again. From this point, every sunrise will be a little farther north until June's summer solstice. 

Rev. Paul and those in colder climes may feel happy that going through the shortest day of the year means the days will start getting longer.  It will be imperceptible at first, gathering speed as the calendar approaches spring. 
Yesterday's APOD, the Astronomy Picture of the Day, shows the southern view looking down the Tyrrhenian Sea coast from Santa Severa toward Fiumicino, Italy, and was taken by Danilo Pivato . It's a composite of 43 precisely timed exposures, taken on the solstice in 2005.  

Cool shot, but it's only one day.  Wouldn't it be neat to see the sun's wandering over the course of a year?  Of course it has been done.  It takes a bit more planning, but you just need to take a photograph at the exact same time regularly throughout the year and be sure before you start that the image will fit on the film or sensor.  Once a week is good, round number and you pretty much can't make the exposures too short.  Take the photograph when the sun is high enough above the horizon to record on the winter solstice, and leave the camera pointed at the same place for a year.  Add one longer exposure picture when the sky has a pretty look you like and maybe you can get a picture as pretty as this one.  The photograph shows a curve called an analemma.  The winter solstice sun is the bottom middle of the elongated figure 8; the summer solstice at the upper, narrower end. 
This one was taken by István Mátis from a window in his apartment in Romania (much larger version is here).  He writes,
The discs of the Sun are taken between 11/6/2012 and 1/19/2014 at 7:00 UT, which is 9'o clock in the morning local time during winter and 10'o clock during daylight saving time. The background is made on 1/14/2014 at 7:55 local time, from the original location of the analemma.
More details here.  My guess is that the gaps in the pattern were caused by cloudy days. 


6 comments:

  1. Got to hand it to you, SiG. You come up with some of the most interesting stuff, on a regular basis. Thanks for that.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I took a series of pictures of the South side of my house so I could clearly see where the sun was hitting. I intend to install a small solar panel system and this will allow me to know where to place it for year round solar exposure.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Off topic:
    Researchers Grow Blood Vessel in a Week

    http://www.laboratoryequipment.com/news/2014/10/researchers-grow-blood-vessel-week
    via
    http://stuff-that-irks-me.tumblr.com/post/105929857226/laboratoryequipment-researchers-grow-blood

    73, Jim

    ReplyDelete
  4. Jim - Thanks for that link! Really cool to see them helping kids that way,

    Anon 0008 - good idea. I'd probably go down the rabbit hole of trying to find a trigonometry solution, but you'll have your system up while I'm still studying.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Cute little website that calculates and displays solar graphs. Requires Javascript, at least for the handy version.

    http://ptaff.ca/soleil/?lang=en_CA

    Sunrise, sunset and time of light
    Daily variation of time of light
    Maximal sun altitude
    Daily maximal solar flux
    Twilight length

    73, Jim

    ReplyDelete