Solstice brings longest day, strange traditions
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A dancer twirls her dress in a summer solstice 2000 parade in Seattle over the weekend
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June 20, 2000
Web posted at: 4:28 p.m. EDT (2028 GMT)
By Richard Stenger
CNN.com Writer
(CNN) -- A scientifically precise event that happens once
every six months, the solstice has inspired
mysterious celebrations and been blamed for irrational
conduct for centuries.
The summer solstice arrives Tuesday when the sun reaches its
farthest point north of the equator. It marks the longest day
of the year and the beginning of summer for the Northern
Hemisphere. The event produces the opposite effect in the
southern half of the planet: the shortest day of the year and
the onset of winter.
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Sunrise, sunset
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The annual changing of the seasons bathes the Arctic in
sunlight and plunges much of the Antarctic in darkness for
months. But southerners take heart. After the solstice occurs
at 9:48 p.m. EDT, the sun begins a march south, concluding
six months later with another solstice in which the seasons
reverse themselves.
The North Pole tilts slightly more than 23 degrees toward the
sun on the day of the solstice. The vertical noon rays are
directly over the Tropic of Cancer. In late December the
conditions reverse, with the South Pole tilting toward the
sun and the solar rays shining over the Tropic of Capricorn.
Basking in midsummer sun
Civilizations have celebrated summer solstices since ancient
times. The Romans honored Fors Fortuna, the goddess of
fortune. The Druids assembled at Stonehenge, a mysterious
prehistoric arrangement of mammoth stone slabs in England.
The circle of megaliths is arranged to capture the light of
the summer solstice sunrise, much like a temple the
Incas built centuries ago in Peru.
Legend holds that the summer solstice, also known as
midsummer, prods humans to engage in strange behavior. The
myth inspired Shakespeare in his "A Midsummer Night's Dream," a romantic, nonsensical comedy that took place on the summer solstice.
Strawberry moons of June
While summer has only begun, sky watchers can observe the
first astronomical sign of autumn Wednesday morning before
dawn. Fomalhaut, the Autumn Star, will shine well below the
waning moon.
The moon appeared unusually bright and colorful when it was
full four days. Known as rose or strawberry moons, full moons
in June often put on such displays.
They follow the lowest path across the sky of all full moons.
And moons seen just above the horizon look much larger than
normal because of an optical illusion.
Such moons can look more colorful for the same reason that
sunsets appear red. The low-hanging moon often takes on a
pink or orange hue as a result of scattered moonlight in the
atmosphere.
Information from NASA and Sky & Telescope magazine was used in this report.
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