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11.1: Sunrise, Sunset

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    31654
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    Two very important and obvious-if-you-think-about-them phenomena mark the seasons. First, the time of the sunrise and the time of the sunset change daily. Unless you arrived on Planet Earth only recently, the nights of your entire life have gotten longer during certain times of the year and shorter during other times. Now, some people will say that the days get shorter in the winter and longer in the summer. But it’s really more accurate to say that daylength, defined as the lighted portion of the day, changes over the seasons. In actuality daylength increases from the first day of winter until the first day of summer. From the first day of summer to the first day of winter, the daylength hours diminish.

    Second, the point on the eastern horizon where the Sun comes up and the point on the western horizon where it goes down change every day. (You knew that, right?) These points actually have a name: the sunrise point, the location on the eastern horizon where the Sun rises, and the sunset point, the location on the western horizon where the Sun sets. The reason for the change in the sunrise and sunset points has to do with the path of the Sun as it crosses the sky. As it moves from the sunrise point to the sunset point, the Sun traces an arc—the solar path. And the solar path changes daily. Now, the solar path might not be something that you’ve ever taken notice of, but you’ve likely noticed changes in the sunrise and sunset points. Have you ever been nearly blinded by the rising or setting sun while driving along an east–west highway? That happens because the sunrise or sunset points fall in a direct line with the road you’re on. You’ve fallen victim to the seasonally changing solar path.


    This page titled 11.1: Sunrise, Sunset is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by W. Sean Chamberlin, Nicki Shaw, and Martha Rich (Blue Planet Publishing) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.