
After the Shortest Day of the Year, Get Ready for Sunlight!
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After winter solstice, does it get lighter in the morning first,or get lighter in the evening first?
Hi Kathy, Thank you for this excellent question! We were just having this very discussion today. Some of us notice the increased light in the morning and others notice it first in the afternoon. It’s the evenings that get lighter first. How much so depends on where you are. You can use our calculator to find out day by day the increase in minutes of sunlight for your location: https://www.almanac.com/astronomy/sun-rise-and-set
—The Editors
,,..."look out your most southwest window,,...
Looking directly South, the Sun sets
On my right side.
It rises on my left side.
What did I miss?
N. TED Ruest
Ntruest@gmail.com
I'll have to read it again,,,..
I even wrote my name in the air to check my left from my right.
His made my brain hurt too.
I got it,,..
LOL IM LAUGHING AT MESELF,,,...
This blog post explains everything I needed to know and appreciate Bob's input!
Always anxious to see more of the sun after Dec. 21st , but surprised to read the length of daylight increases each day varies !
Thanks
I was wondering if the Sun is higher in the sky at times during winter; more sunlight + warmth; very interesting!
I studied meteorology as a student in jr and senior high school. I had come to the conclusion that at both winter and summer solstice that the earth did a slight wobble. That wobble would last 2 or 3 cycles of the earths orbit around the sun. Is this true? My educational period is the late 70’s
I use wunderground.com and today Jan 24, 2023 they tell us: "Tomorrow will be 2 minutes 12 seconds longer". Is the time given just the time the day has gotten longer since the Winter Solstice? Or, are seconds since the solstice added together and today is 132 seconds longer that the day of the solstice?
I mean if tomorrow is a little longer do I add todays length of 132 seconds to tomorrows length? I don't think so.