rejectomorph: (munkacsy_parc_monceau)
rejectomorph ([personal profile] rejectomorph) wrote2004-12-20 05:29 pm

Terminus

The exact moment when the sun is farthest south comes at 4:42 AM PST Tuesday morning. (If it goes farther, we're in trouble.) So, had the calendar not gotten screwed up, this would be New Year's Eve. Instead, it's just the tattered tail-end of autumn. But what the hell. I think I'll have a drink anyway. Then I have to put out the trash cans, because it's Monday. Happy Monday, everybody!

[identity profile] gutbloom.livejournal.com 2004-12-21 01:36 am (UTC)(link)
I don't like Mondays.

[identity profile] carbonunit.livejournal.com 2004-12-21 06:48 pm (UTC)(link)
Not to be pedantic or anything, but isn't it actually the moment when the tilt of the worlds axis is aligned most perfectly with the sun? It's the moment when, seen from the sun, the axis runs exactly vertically, with the south pole facing the sun, the sun doesn't actually move.

It is hot, here. In [livejournal.com profile] flying_blindian terms, the effulgent sun rises early and throws hazy humid beams across the city, before veiling itself in the gossamer threads of the high haze. All the rest of the day the sky radiates it's blank white heat, like the lid of a giant enamel casserole dish.

[identity profile] carbonunit.livejournal.com 2004-12-22 03:44 am (UTC)(link)
Another exact way to define the event is, it's the moment when the plant of the earths orbit around the sun, and the axis of the earth, as seen from the locus of the orbit, appear to be at 90 degrees.

We suffer more because by chance this corresponds with the earths closest approach to the sun, the perihelion. Winter is slightly colder too. The larger amount of ocean in this hemisphere tends to mollify this effect.