05 July 2012

Aphelion.


Planet Earth reaches its most distant point from the sun for 2012 on July 4, at 10 p.m. Central Daylight Time in the U.S. (July 5 at 3 UTC). By Universal Time, that’s July 5, at 3 in the morning.

Astronomers call this farthest point aphelion, and, at aphelion we’re about three million miles farther from the sun than we will be six months from now. That’s in contrast to our average distance from the sun of about 93 million miles. Looking for Earth’s exact distance from the sun today? It’s at 94,505,851 miles. Last year, on July 4, 2011, the Earth at aphelion was a tiny bit farther, at 94,511,923 miles.

Planet Earth reaches its most distant point from our local star for all of 2012 on July 4, at 10 p.m. Central Daylight Time in the U.S. (July 5 at 3 UTC).

We’re always farthest from the sun in July during a Northern Hemisphere summer – and closest in January during a Northern Hemisphere winter – and that’s a good illustration of the fact that it’s not the Earth’s distance from the sun that creates the seasons on our world. Instead, the seasons result from Earth’s tilt on its axis. Right now, it’s summer in the Northern Hemisphere because the northern part of Earth is tilted most toward the sun.


Read the rest at EarthSky.

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