The Suns surprising movement across the sky Gordon Williamson

Suppose you placed a camera
at a fixed position,

took a picture of the sky

at the same time everyday
for an entire year

and overlayed all of the photos
on top of each other.

What would the sun look like
in that combined image?

A stationary dot?

A circular path?

Neither.

Oddly enough, it makes this
figure eight pattern,

known as the Sun’s analemma,

but why?

The Earth’s movement
creates a few cycles.

First of all, it rotates on its axis
about once every 24 hours,

producing sunrises and sunsets.

At the same time,
it’s making a much slower cycle,

orbiting around the sun
approximately every 365 days.

But there’s a twist.

Relative to the plane of its orbit,

the Earth doesn’t spin
with the North Pole pointing straight up.

Instead, its axis has a constant tilt
of 23.4 degrees.

This is known as the Earth’s axial tilt,
or obliquity.

A 23-degree tilt may not seem important,

but it’s the main reason that
we experience different seasons.

Because the axis remains tilted
in the same direction

while the Earth makes its annual orbit,

there are long periods each year

when the northern half of the planet
remains tilted toward the Sun

while the southern half is tilted away

and vice versa,

what we experience as summer and winter.

During summer in a given hemisphere,

the Sun appears higher in the sky,
making the days longer and warmer.

Once a year, the Sun’s declination,

the angle between the equator

and the position on the Earth
where the Sun appears directly overhead

reaches its maximum.

This day is known as the summer solstice,
the longest day of the year,

and the one day where the Sun
appears highest in the sky.

So the Earth’s axial tilt

partially explains why the Sun
changes positions in the sky

and the analemma’s length

represents the full 46.8 degrees
of the sun’s declination

throughout the year.

But why is it a figure eight
and not just a straight line?

This is due to another feature
of the Earth’s revolution,

its orbital eccentricity.

The Earth’s orbit around the Sun
is an ellipse,

with its distance to the Sun
changing at various points.

The corresponding change
in gravitational force

causes the Earth to move
fastest in January

when it reaches
its closest point to the Sun,

the perihelion,

and the slowest in July
when it reaches its farthest point,

the aphelion.

The Earth’s eccentricity
means that solar noon,

the time when the Sun
is highest in the sky,

doesn’t always occur
at the same point in the day.

So a sundial may be as much
as sixteen minutes ahead

or fourteen minutes behind
a regular clock.

In fact, clock time and Sun time
only match four times a year.

The analemma’s width represents
the extent of this deviation.

So how did people know
the correct time years ago?

For most of human history,

going by the Sun’s position
was close enough.

But during the modern era,

the difference between sundials
and mechanical clocks became important.

The equation of time,
introduced by Ptolemy

and later refined based
on the work of Johannes Kepler,

converts between apparent solar time and
the mean time we’ve all come to rely on.

Globes even used to have
the analemma printed on them

to allow people to determine
the difference

between clock time and solar time
based on the day of the year.

Just how the analemma appears
depends upon where you are.

It will be tilted at an angle
depending on your latitude

or inverted if you’re in
the southern hemisphere.

And if you’re on another planet,

you might find something
completely different.

Depending on that planet’s
orbital eccentricity and axial tilt,

the analemma might appear as a tear drop,

oval,

or even a straight line.