Community Corner

Summer Solstice 2013 Arrives Friday (Or Thursday, Depending)

It will be 1:04 a.m. on the East Coast and 10:04 p.m. on the West Coast when the Sun is above the Tropic of Cancer.

By Brandie Jefferson

The summer solstice, which arrives tonight in the Northern Hemisphere, will straddle two days in the United States this year.

On Friday at 1:04 a.m. EDT, the Sun will be directly above the northernmost latitude of its annual progression, otherwise known as the Tropic of Cancer. But on the West Coast, the clock will read 10:04 p.m. on Thursday—meaning they’ll be squeezing into teeny tiny bikinis one calendar day earlier.

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That’s because a solstice occurs at a single moment in time worldwide—5:04 UTC, in this case. It’s not unusual for that moment to span two different calendar days in the U.S., according to Weather Underground. Over the past 52 solstices and equinoxes, it’s happened 11 times.

The solstice also marks the longest day of the year. On Friday, we’ll see about 14 hours and 56 minutes of sunlight. (We also had approximately that amount of sunlight on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, according to the U.S. Naval Observatory, and we’ll see similar amounts on Saturday as well.)

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So enjoy the Sun. There’s plenty of it in the forecast tomorrow, according to the National Weather Service, and temperatures should be in the low 80s.


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