I know the days get shorter every winter. That’s not my question.

My question is this:

My father has been keeping track of when the sun sets each evening for many years. And the last couple of years the sun sets earlier than it used to.

In the past, the earliest time of the year when the sun would go down behind the mountains was around 1 PM in the afternoon. This would happen around Christmas.

But at some point in recent years, this changed. Now the sun already sets behind the mountains at 1 PM at the end of November. Which means that around Christmas, the sun sets noticeably earlier than it used to.

I don’t keep track of this, but I think he’s right.

So how is that possible?

  • More-Talk-2660B
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    Easy answer? The fact that a solar day isn’t actually 24 full hours, it’s 23.9 hours. Leap years account for this, but imperfectly - so much so that centenary years not divisible by 400 are non-leap years to adjust in the opposite direction of a leap year. Theoretically (unmedicated, top-of-my-head math) over the course of 20 years the 1pm sunset could shift forward by a month, since human timekeeping is our static perception of time rather than the actual solar day starting and ending; night and day aren’t actually flipping, the clock and calendar are because they’re not perfect, so because we adhere to those and not sunrise/sunset it seems like the sunset is “wandering.”