cellio: (moon-shadow)
[personal profile] cellio
Serendipity (definition by example): receiving an invitation for Shabbat dinner from someone who's been trying to invite us for a while, on a night when my dinner plans are easily aborted and the service I'll miss as a result is being led by one of the grade-school classes. That's a no-brainer. :-) (And Dani agreed to go.)

I haven't been paying a lot of attention -- I prefer my experience of sunrise to be theoretical rather than actual -- but I was under the impression that the equinoxes (you know, "equal night/day") canonically fall on the 21st of March and September, with about a day of wiggle room to either side depending on circumstance. But according to daily sunrise/sunset records, the vernal equinox this year appears to have fallen on March 16th or 17th. Tomorrow, the 20th, will have 12 hours and 10 minutes of daylight. Huh? (I'm looking at Pittsburgh times, but since we only care about deltas that shouldn't be important.)

[livejournal.com profile] src has been going through hell at work, but this account had me laughing for quite a while. We have given up trying to recreate the gleaming marble edifices which were extant when we last left these boxen, before "oh, so-and-so was working on this console a few hours ago, I wonder if he...". We will settle for sturdy, habitable brownstones. (There's funnier stuff near the end that I don't want to spoil.)

Link from [livejournal.com profile] siderea: We See That Now - a heartfelt -- no -- abject -- no -- craven apology to the right from the left for our campaign of hate, anger and malice against God's own president.

VAXen, My Children, Just Don't Belong In Some Places -- an old favorite from Usenet; link courtesy of [livejournal.com profile] dglenn.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-03-19 03:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dvarin.livejournal.com
Due to refraction of light as it enters the atmosphere, the sun rises a little earlier and sets a little later than might be expected just by calculating when the physical star comes above the plane of the horizon.

Also, it depends on when "sunrise" is--I wouldn't be surprised to learn that on the equinoxes the center of the sun passes the horizon exactly 12 hours from when it last passed, but that means that the leading or trailing edge will cause daytime to start earlier and end later than that, and probably the "sunrise" and "sunset" times are the passing of the edge of the sun over the horizon rather than the center.

Close but no cigar...

Date: 2004-03-19 05:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] caryabend.livejournal.com
If I recall my Astronomy 101, an equinox occurs when the sun's center crosses the celestial equator. So your explanation of the length of day and night is essentially correct.

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