Saturday, March 20, 2010
Vernal Equinox
Vernal Equinox
Spring Equinox
An event that occurs once a year, when the Sun reaches a point in the constellation of Pisces known as the First Point of Aries.
As the Earth orbits the Sun, its poles always point at fixed positions in the sky. The north pole points toward Polaris (the Pole Star), while the south pole points towards the constellation of Octans. The planet's orientation is fixed relative to the stars, subject to a long slow change over the millennia known as precession.
This fixed inclination means that, as the Earth travels around the Sun, each pole is sometimes angled towards the Sun, and sometimes angled away. From the Sun's perspective, the Earth 'tilts' backward and forward each year, and it is this 'tilt' that causes the seasons.
When a pole is oriented towards the Sun, its hemisphere has six months where the Sun is high in the sky, and days are longer than nights (that is, summer). For the other six months, the pole is tilted away from the Sun, which is low on the horizon, and nights are longer than days (winter). These differences are more noticeable at higher latitudes: at the poles themselves, the effects are extreme, and result in months of daylight followed by months of darkness.
The equinox is the point where one season turns to the other. The word is Latin for 'equal night' and refers to the fact that, on the equinox, day and night are of equal length. There are two equinoxes each year, with the vernal equinox usually occurring on 21 March. Vernal comes originally from the Latin word for 'bloom' - it refers to the fact that, in the northern hemisphere, this equinox marks the end of winter and the beginning of spring. The name is less meaningful in the southern hemisphere, where this equinox actually marks the beginning of autumn, but nonetheless the traditional name vernal is commonly retained.
Photo and text courtesy of http://www.glyphweb.com/esky/concepts/vernalequinox.html
Happy Vernal Equinox! On a superb weather weekend we are outside enjoying the warmth and the sun and will hike to mark the occasion.
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