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Solstice Formula

The document derives the formula for calculating the length of the longest day at a given latitude. It represents the Earth as a sphere and the sun as a point light source. It uses trigonometry to relate the latitude (β), the sun's maximum latitude (α), and the fraction of a day that is daylight (θ) through the equation cos(π - θ) = sinβ tanα/cosβ. This yields the final formula for daylight hours as 24θ.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
105 views

Solstice Formula

The document derives the formula for calculating the length of the longest day at a given latitude. It represents the Earth as a sphere and the sun as a point light source. It uses trigonometry to relate the latitude (β), the sun's maximum latitude (α), and the fraction of a day that is daylight (θ) through the equation cos(π - θ) = sinβ tanα/cosβ. This yields the final formula for daylight hours as 24θ.

Uploaded by

schultzmath
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Derivation of the solstice formula

The goal is to derive the formula for the length of the longest day which appears in the document http://math.ucr.edu/~res/solstice/solstice.pdf. In this discussion represents the latitude, and is the angle 23.5 degrees (approximately the northernmost latitude that the sun reaches). We assume that lies between 0 (the latitude of the equator) and 66.5 degrees North (the approximate latitude of the Arctic Circle).

A table of values for this function in increments of one degree (less in higher latitudes) is given in the document http://math.ucr.edu/~res/solstice/solstice-table.pdf. We begin with a drawing to describe the situation. In this drawing we assume that the y axis is pointing upward from the surface of the document, and the drawing represents the planar slice defined by y = 0.

We assume that the earth corresponds to the sphere with equation in coordinate 3 space and that the sun is located at some point of the form (d, 0, 0) where d is much greater than 1. Then the points on the sphere illuminated by the sun lie in the half space of all points whose x coordinate is nonnegative. The circle () of latitude (North) goes through the point P, it is centered at F such that PF is perpendicular to NC, and the plane of the circle () is perpendicular to F at the latter point. This circle intersects the plane with equation x = 0 in exactly two points, and if is positive then the major arc determined by these points has some angular measure 2. It follows that the amount of daytime at latitude (in hours) is equal to 24 . /.

Clearly we need to find a formula for in terms of and . One step in this process is to find the lengths |FP| and |GF| of the segments [FP] and [GF]. Elementary trigonometry implies |FP| = cos . Similarly, the length is equal to sin , and therefore it follows that |GF| = |CF| tan = sin tan . Next, we need to express |GF| in terms of . In order to do this we need to take a different view of the circle containing the arc of latitude ; the drawing below depicts this arc in the plane containing it, looking perpendicularly downward at the plane.

It follows that |FG| is equal to |FP|, which is cos , times the absolute value of cos , which is just cos ( ). Therefore we have the following equation:

cos ( ) = |FG|/|FP| = sin tan /cos =


Therefore the total fraction of daylight time at the given latitude is equal to

and by the previous formula we know that is equal to the total number of daylight hours, we need to multiply the resulting expression

To find

by 24 (hours), and if we do so we obtain the formula at the beginning of the document.

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