In Canada, the longest day of the year is the summer solstice, which usually falls on June 21st. The shortest day of the year is the winter solstice, typically around December 21st. These days mark the start of summer and winter, respectively.
That depends where on earth you're located.
You asked for it. Here it is:
Northern hemisphere, between 23.5 and 66.5 north latitude:
-- December 21 is the shortest.
-- June 21 is the longest.
Northern hemisphere, within 23.5 degrees of the north pole:
-- Longest night is longer than 24 hours, centered on December 21.
-- Longest day is longer than 24 hours, centered on June 21.
-- Exact lengths depend on how far from the north pole you are.
At the north pole:
-- Sun is down from September 21 until March 21.
-- Sun is up from March 21 until September 21.
Southern hemisphere, between 23.5 and 66.5 south latitude:
-- June 21 is the shortest.
-- December 21 is the longest.
Southern hemisphere, within 23.5 degrees of the south pole:
-- Longest night is longer than 24 hours, centered on June 21.
-- Longest day is longer than 24 hours, centered on December 21.
-- Exact lengths depend on how far from the south pole you are.
At the south pole:
-- Sun is down from March 21 until September 21.
-- Sun is up from September 21 until March 21.
Exactly on the equator:
-- Two equal shortest days: June 21 and September 21.
-- Two equal longest days: March 21 and September 21.
Within 23.5 degrees north of the equator:
-- One shortest day on December 21.
-- Two equal longest days between March 21 and September 21, with their dates
depending on your latitude, at equal periods either side of June 21.
-- If you're right on the line at 23.5 degrees, you have one longest day, on June 21.
Within 23.5 degrees south of the equator:
-- One shortest day on June 21.
-- Two equal longest days between September 21 and March 21, with their dates
depending on your latitude, at equal periods either side of December 21.
-- If you're right on the line at 23.5 degrees, you have one longest day, on December 21.
Note:
Each equinox and solstice can wander a day or two from the "21st" of the
indicated month. It's not the equinoxes and solstices that are wandering.
It's our calendar, plus the fact that at the moment of the equinox or solstice ...
as well as any other moment during the earth's rotation ... there are generally
two different calendar dates on the surface of the earth as a whole.
The longest and shortest days of the year in Canada are the same as they are
everywhere else in the northern hemisphere at the Summer and Winter "Solstices"
(June 21 and December 21 respectively). Summer is the longest and winter the
shortest.
The exact date can vary, but only by a day or so.
The solstices occur on June 21 and December 21, plus or minus a day either way because of the cycle of leap years. In the northern hemisphere, June 21 is the beginning of Summer, and December 21 is the beginning of winter. These are reversed in the southern hemisphere.
North of the Arctic Circle (or south of the Antarctic Circle) there are times when the Sun is up 24 hours in the day and the same at night. But the Solstice dates are the at the center of the daylight/nighttime periods.
That depends on how far north you are; the further north, the shorter the "shortest day" will be. There are areas in Canada that are above the Arctic Circle, so there can be weeks around the winter solstice from the time the Sun sets and the time it rises again.
See the links below, which will allow you to see the times of sunrise/sunset for any location you choose.
http://aa.usno.navy.mil/data/docs/RS_OneDay.php
The shortest day of the year for the Southern Hemisphere is typically around June 21st. This day is known as the winter solstice, when the sun is at its lowest point in the sky and daylight hours are at their shortest.
On December 21, the Earth is positioned at the December solstice. This is when the Northern Hemisphere experiences the winter solstice, marking the shortest day and longest night of the year, while the Southern Hemisphere experiences the summer solstice, with the longest day and shortest night of the year.
December 21 is the winter solstice in the Northern Hemisphere, marking the shortest day of the year because it has the fewest hours of daylight due to the tilt of the Earth's axis away from the sun. After this day, the days start getting longer as the Earth continues its orbit around the sun.
The longest day in Colorado is typically around June 21st, which is the summer solstice. On this day, Colorado experiences the most daylight hours of the year.
The shortest day of the year in the northern hemisphere is the winter solstice, which usually falls on December 21st or 22nd. On this day, the northern hemisphere experiences the shortest period of daylight and the longest night of the year.
Yes. Longest day of the year in one hemisphere, and shortest day of the year in the other hemisphere. So our summer solstice on June 21 is the longest day in Europe or America, but the shortest day for the Australians.
the longest
Because it is the shortest day of the year.
No, the shortest.
seasons
Yes.
An equinox is not the shortest day. It has the same amount of daylight and darkness. The solstices have the longest and shortest days. The winter solstice is the shortest day of the year in terms of the amount of daylight.
Longest - Winter Solstice - December 21 Shortest - Summer Solstice - June 21
a soltice is a day where the day is either the shortest or longest in the year, there are two soltices, the summer solstice (june 21st) the longest day of the year and the winter solstice (december 21st) the shortest day of the year
NO! You experience it as the longest or shortest day of the year.
Alaska has the longest day of the year with almost 24 hours of daylight during the summer solstice. Hawaii has the shortest day of the year with around 10 hours of daylight during the winter solstice.
December 21-22 and the longest is June 21-22