fbpx
Wikipedia

Twilight

Twilight is light produced by sunlight scattering in the upper atmosphere, when the Sun is below the horizon, which illuminates the lower atmosphere and the Earth's surface. The word twilight can also refer to the periods of time when this illumination occurs.[2]

Twilight is the time period between (astronomical) dawn and sunrise, or between sunset and (astronomical) dusk.
Morning twilight: astronomical, nautical, and civil stages at dawn. The apparent disk of the Sun is shown to scale.[1]
Evening twilight: civil, nautical, and astronomical stages at dusk. The solar disk is shown to scale.

The lower the Sun is beneath the horizon, the dimmer the twilight (other factors such as atmospheric conditions being equal). When the Sun reaches 18° below the horizon, the twilight's brightness is nearly zero, and evening twilight becomes nighttime. When the Sun again reaches 18° below the horizon, nighttime becomes morning twilight. Owing to its distinctive quality, primarily the absence of shadows and the appearance of objects silhouetted against the lit sky, twilight has long been popular with photographers and painters, who often refer to it as the blue hour, after the French expression l'heure bleue.

By analogy with evening twilight, the word twilight is also sometimes used metaphorically, to imply that something is losing strength and approaching its end. For example, very old people may be said to be "in the twilight of their lives". The collateral adjective for twilight is crepuscular, which may be used to describe the behavior of animals that are most active during this period.

Definitions by geometry

Twilight is defined according to the solar elevation angle θs, which is the position of the geometric center of the Sun relative to the horizon. There are three established and widely accepted subcategories of twilight: civil twilight (nearest the horizon), nautical twilight, and astronomical twilight (farthest from the horizon).[2]

Civil twilight

 
Midtown Manhattan during civil twilight, demonstrating blue hour

Civil twilight is defined as when the geometric center of the Sun is between 6° below the horizon and the horizon itself.[3][4][5]

Civil twilight is the period when enough natural light remains that artificial light in towns and cities is not needed. In the United States' military, the initialisms BMCT (begin morning civil twilight, i.e. civil dawn) and EECT (end evening civil twilight, i.e. civil dusk) are used to refer to the start of morning civil twilight and the end of evening civil twilight, respectively. Civil dawn is preceded by morning nautical twilight and civil dusk is followed by evening nautical twilight.

 
Civil twilight in a small town in the Mojave Desert

Under clear weather conditions, civil twilight approximates the limit at which solar illumination suffices for the human eye to clearly distinguish terrestrial objects. Enough illumination renders artificial sources unnecessary for most outdoor activities. At civil dawn and at civil dusk sunlight clearly defines the horizon while the brightest stars and planets can appear. As observed from the Earth (see apparent magnitude), sky-gazers know Venus, the brightest planet, as the "morning star" or "evening star" because they can see it during civil twilight.[6]

Lawmakers have enshrined the concept of civil twilight. Such statutes typically use a fixed period after sunset or before sunrise (most commonly 20–30 minutes), rather than how many degrees the Sun is below the horizon. Examples include when drivers of automobiles must turn on their headlights (called lighting-up time in the UK), when hunting is restricted, or when the crime of burglary is to be treated as nighttime burglary, which carries stiffer penalties in some jurisdictions.

The period may affect when extra equipment, such as anti-collision lights, is required for aircraft to operate.[7] In the US, civil twilight for aviation is defined in Part 1.1 of the Federal Aviation Regulations (FARs)[8] as the time listed in the American Air Almanac.[9]

Nautical twilight

 
Evening nautical twilight on Lake Ontario, Canada

Nautical twilight is defined as when the geometric center of the Sun is between 12° and 6° below the horizon.[10][3][5]

 
Long exposure of nautical twilight in a small town in the Mojave Desert

Before

Before nautical dawn and after nautical dusk, sailors cannot navigate via the horizon at sea as they cannot clearly see the horizon.[1][failed verification] At nautical dawn and nautical dusk, the human eye finds it difficult, if not impossible, to discern traces of illumination near the sunset or sunrise point of the horizon (first light after nautical dawn but before civil dawn and nightfall after civil dusk but before nautical dusk).[citation needed]

 
At the beginning of nautical twilight, artificial lighting must be used to see terrestrial objects clearly.

Sailors can take reliable star sightings of well-known stars, during the stage of nautical twilight when they can distinguish a visible horizon for reference (i.e. after astronomic dawn or before astronomic dusk).

Under good atmospheric conditions with the absence of other illumination, during nautical twilight, the human eye may distinguish general outlines of ground objects but cannot participate in detailed outdoor operations.[11]

Nautical twilight has military considerations as well. The initialisms BMNT (begin morning nautical twilight, i.e. nautical dawn) and EENT (end evening nautical twilight, i.e. nautical dusk) are used and considered when planning military operations. A military unit may treat BMNT and EENT with heightened security, e.g. by "standing to", in which everyone assumes a defensive position.

Astronomical twilight

 
Evening astronomical twilight (dusk)

Astronomical twilight is defined as when the geometric center of the Sun is between 18° and 12° below the horizon.[3][4][2]

 
Long exposure of astronomical twilight (dusk) in a small town in the Mojave Desert

During astronomical twilight, the sky is dark enough to permit astronomical observation of point sources of light such as stars, except in regions with more intense skyglow due to light pollution, moonlight, auroras, and other sources of light. Some critical observations, such as of faint diffuse items such as nebulae and galaxies, may require observation beyond the limit of astronomical twilight. Theoretically, the faintest stars detectable by the naked eye (those of approximately the sixth magnitude) will become visible in the evening at astronomical dusk, and become invisible at astronomical dawn.[12]

Because of light pollution, observers in some localities, generally in and near large cities, may never have the opportunity to view anything but the brightest stars, irrespective of the presence of any twilight at all, nor to experience anything close to a truly dark sky.

Times of occurrence

 
World map showing limiting latitudes of each type of twilight during the solstices

Between day and night

Observers within 48°34' of the Equator (within 50° of the Equator in May or November, within 57° of the Equator in April or October) and within 72° of the Equator on the equinoxes can view twilight twice each day on every date of the year between astronomical dawn, nautical dawn, or civil dawn, and sunrise as well as between sunset and civil dusk, nautical dusk, or astronomical dusk.[clarification needed] This also occurs for most observers at higher latitudes on many dates throughout the year, except those around the summer solstice. However, at latitudes closer than 9 degrees (between 81° and 90°) to either Pole, the Sun cannot rise above the horizon nor sink more than 18 degrees below it on the same day on any date, this example of twilight cannot occur because the angular difference between solar noon and solar midnight elevates less than 18 degrees.

Lasting from one day to the next

Timelapse video of twilight and sunrise in Gjøvik in February 2021

At latitudes greater than 48°34' North or South, on dates near the summer solstice, twilight can last from sunset to sunrise, since the Sun does not sink more than 18 degrees below the horizon, so complete darkness does not occur even at solar midnight. These latitudes include many densely populated regions of the Earth, including the entire United Kingdom and other countries in northern Europe and even parts of central Europe.

Between one night and the next

In Arctic and Antarctic latitudes in wintertime, the polar night only rarely produces complete darkness for 24 hours each day. This can occur only at locations within 5.5 degrees of latitude of the Pole, and there only on dates close to the winter solstice. At all other latitudes and dates, the polar night includes a daily period of twilight, when the Sun is not far below the horizon. Around winter solstice, when the solar declination changes slowly, complete darkness lasts several weeks at the Pole itself, e.g., from May 11 to July 31 at Amundsen–Scott South Pole Station.[a] North Pole has the experience of this from November 13 to January 29.

Solar noon at civil twilight during a polar night: between 67°24' and 72°34' north or south.

Solar noon at nautical twilight during a polar night: between 72°34' and 78°34' north or south.

Solar noon at astronomical twilight during a polar night: between 78°34' and 84°34' north or south.

Solar noon at night during a polar night: between 84°34' and 90° north or south.

Lasting for 24 hours

At latitudes within 9 degrees of either Pole, as the Sun's angular elevation difference is less than 18 degrees, twilight can last for the entire 24 hours. This occurs for one day at latitudes near 9 degrees from the Pole and extends up to several weeks the further toward the Pole one goes. The only permanent settlement to experience this condition is Alert, Nunavut, Canada, where it occurs for a week in late February, and again in late October.

Duration

 
The number of daylight hours depends on the latitude and time of year. Each pole has continuous daylight near its summer solstice.
 
Carpet plot of sunshine at latitude 70° north
 
Carpet plot of sunshine at latitude 50° north
 
Carpet plot of sunshine at the equator
 
Twilight at Paranal Observatory in Chile[13]

The duration of twilight depends on the latitude and the time of the year. The apparent travel of the Sun occurs at the rate of 15 degrees per hour (360° per day), but sunrise and sunset happen typically at oblique angles to the horizon and the actual duration of any twilight period will be a function of that angle, being longer for more oblique angles. This angle of the Sun's motion with respect to the horizon changes with latitude as well as the time of year (affecting the angle of the Earth's axis with respect to the Sun).

At Greenwich, England (51.5°N), the duration of civil twilight will vary from 33 minutes to 48 minutes, depending on the time of year. At the equator, civil twilight can last as little as 24 minutes. This is true because at low latitudes the Sun's apparent movement is perpendicular to the observer's horizon. But at the poles, civil twilight can be as long as 2–3 weeks. In the Arctic and Antarctic regions, twilight (if there is any) can last for several hours. There is no astronomical twilight at the poles near the winter solstice (for about 74 days at the North Pole and about 80 days at the South Pole). As one gets closer to the Arctic and Antarctic circles, the Sun's disk moves toward the observer's horizon at a lower angle. The observer's earthly location will pass through the various twilight zones less directly, taking more time.

Within the polar circles, twenty-four-hour daylight is encountered in summer, and in regions very close to the poles, twilight can last for weeks on the winter side of the equinoxes. Outside the polar circles, where the angular distance from the polar circle is less than the angle which defines twilight (see above), twilight can continue through local midnight near the summer solstice. The precise position of the polar circles, and the regions where twilight can continue through local midnight, varies slightly from year to year with Earth's axial tilt. The lowest latitudes at which the various twilights can continue through local midnight are approximately 60.561° (60°33′43″) for civil twilight, 54.561° (54°33′43″) for nautical twilight and 48.561° (48°33′43″) for astronomical twilight.[14][15]

Lowest Latitude Twilight Observed at Local Midnight by Month
Month Civil Nautical Astronomical
January 60°42′S 54°42′S 48°42′S
February 65°42′S 59°42′S 53°42′S
March 75°42′S 69°42′S 63°42′S
April 69°N 63°N 57°N
May 62°N 56°N 50°N
June 60°33′43″N 54°33′43″N 48°33′43″N
July 60°42′N 54°42′N 48°42′N
August 65°42′N 59°42′N 53°42′N
September 75°42′N 69°42′N 63°42′N
October 69°S 63°S 57°S
November 62°S 56°S 50°S
December 60°33′43″S 54°33′43″S 48°33′43″S

These are the largest cities of their respective countries where the various twilights can continue through local solar midnight:

Although Helsinki, Oslo, Stockholm, Tallinn, and Saint Petersburg also enter into nautical twilight after sunset, they do have noticeably lighter skies at night during the summer solstice than other locations mentioned in their category above, because they do not go far into nautical twilight. A white night is a night with only civil twilight which lasts from sunset to sunrise.[16]

At the winter solstice within the polar circle, twilight can extend through solar noon at latitudes below 72.561° (72°33′43″) for civil twilight, 78.561° (78°33′43″) for nautical twilight, and 84.561° (84°33′43″) for astronomical twilight.

On other planets

Twilight on Mars is longer than on Earth, lasting for up to two hours before sunrise or after sunset. Dust high in the atmosphere scatters light to the night side of the planet. Similar twilights are seen on Earth following major volcanic eruptions.[17]

In religion

Christianity

 
American Benedictine monks around an Easter fire preparing to light the Paschal candle prior to Easter Vigil mass

In Christian practice, "vigil" observances often occur during twilight on the evening before major feast days or holidays. For example, the Easter Vigil is held in the hours of darkness between sunset on Holy Saturday and sunrise on Easter Day — most commonly in the evening of Holy Saturday or midnight — and is the first celebration of Easter, days traditionally being considered to begin at sunset.

Hinduism

Twilight is sacred in Hinduism. It is called गोधूळिवेळ gōdhūḷivēḷ in Sanskrit or गोधूलिवेला godhūlivelā in Hindi, గొధూళివేళ "godhoolivela" in Telugu, literally "cow dust time". Many rituals, including Sandhyavandanam and Puja, are performed at twilight hour. Eating of food is not advised during this time. Sometimes it is referred to as Asurasandhya vela. It is believed that Asuras are active during these hours. One of the avatars of Lord Vishnu, Narasimha, is closely associated with the twilight period. According to Hindu scriptures, a daemonic king, Hiranakashipa, performed penance and obtained a boon from Brahma that he could not be killed during day or night, neither by human nor animal, neither inside his house nor outside. Lord Vishnu appeared in a half-man half-lion form (neither human nor animal), ended the life of Hiranakashipa sitting on the doorstep (neither inside nor outside) during twilight (neither day nor night).[18]

Islam

Twilight is important in Islam as it determines when certain universally obligatory prayers are to be recited. Morning twilight is when morning prayers (Fajr) are done, while evening twilight is the time for evening prayers (Maghrib prayer). Also during Ramadhan, the time for suhoor (morning meal before fasting) ends at morning twilight, while fasting ends after sunset. There is also an important discussion in Islamic jurisprudence between "true dawn" and "false dawn".

Judaism

In Judaism, twilight is considered neither day nor night; consequently it is treated as a safeguard against encroachment upon either. It can be considered a liminal time. For example, the twilight of Friday is reckoned as Sabbath eve, and that of Saturday as Sabbath day; and the same rule applies to festival days.[19]

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Van Flandern, T.; K. Pulkkinen (1980). "Low precision formulae for planetary positions". Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series. 31 (3): 391. Bibcode:1979ApJS...41..391V. doi:10.1086/190623.
  2. ^ a b c . USNO. Archived from the original on 2019-09-27. Retrieved 2011-07-22.
  3. ^ a b c ftp://ftp.flaterco.com/xtide/Bowditch.pdf#238[permanent dead link] The American Practical Navigator, 2002; page 238
  4. ^ a b http://msi.nga.mil/MSISiteContent/StaticFiles/NAV_PUBS/APN/Gloss-1.pdf#9 2017-08-29 at the Wayback Machine Glossary of Marine Navigation
  5. ^ a b http://www.ast.cam.ac.uk/public/ask/2445 University of Cambridge – Institute of Astronomy – Ask an Astronomer [NB: questionable source as its sources refer back to Wikipedia]
  6. ^ "What Is Civil Twilight?". www.timeanddate.com.
  7. ^ 14 CFR 121.323
  8. ^ "Title 14: Aeronautics and Space PART 1 – Definitions". ELECTRONIC CODE OF FEDERAL REGULATIONS. U.S. Government Publishing Office.
  9. ^ "The Air Almanac". aa.usno.navy.mil.
  10. ^ "What Is Nautical Twilight?". www.timeanddate.com.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-08-14. Retrieved 2007-09-06.
  12. ^ "What Is Astronomical Twilight?". www.timeanddate.com.
  13. ^ "Venus and the Moon strike a pose". Retrieved 18 April 2016.
  14. ^ "Length of Day and Twilight (Formulas)". www.gandraxa.com. Retrieved 2011-08-26.
  15. ^ Herbert Glarner's website, reference 2. "Civil Twilight" "6°", "Nautical Twilight" "12°". "90° − Axis(23.439°) − 12° = 54.561°.
  16. ^ "white night". Wiktionary. 4 May 2022.
  17. ^ NASA-Jet Propulsion Laboratory: Winter Solstice on Mars: Rovers Look Forward to A Second Martian Spring, August 07, 2006.
  18. ^ Jossleyn Hennessy (1955). "ch. VII Education in the villages "Cow-dust time"". India democracy and education. Orient Longmans. p. 127.
  19. ^ "SUN, RISING AND SETTING OF THE - JewishEncyclopedia.com". www.jewishencyclopedia.com.

Footnotes

  1. ^ This is the range of dates when the Sun is more than 18 degrees north of the Celestial equator, so it is more than 18 degrees below the horizon as seen from the South Pole. See Position of the Sun#Declination of the Sun as seen from Earth.

Further reading

  • Mateshvili, Nina; Didier Fussen; Filip Vanhellemont; Christine Bingen; Erkki Kyrölä; Iuri Mateshvili; Giuli Mateshvili (2005). "Twilight sky brightness measurements as a useful tool for stratospheric aerosol investigations". Journal of Geophysical Research. 110 (D09209): D09209. Bibcode:2005JGRD..11009209M. doi:10.1029/2004JD005512.

External links

  • Twilight Calculator Compute twilight times.
  • Twilight time calculator 2011-10-14 at the Wayback Machine
  • (archived) by Herbert Glarner.
  • The colors of twilight and sunset
  • HM Nautical Almanac Office Websurf Compute twilight times.
  • Geoscience Australia "Sunrise and sunset times" Compute twilight times.
  • with VBA functions for twilight (dawn and dusk), sunrise, solar noon, sunset, and solar position (azimuth and elevation) by , translated from NOAA's online calculator for sunrise/sunset
  • Time and Date to find the current state of the sun in a specified place.

twilight, other, uses, disambiguation, light, produced, sunlight, scattering, upper, atmosphere, when, below, horizon, which, illuminates, lower, atmosphere, earth, surface, word, twilight, also, refer, periods, time, when, this, illumination, occurs, time, pe. For other uses see Twilight disambiguation Twilight is light produced by sunlight scattering in the upper atmosphere when the Sun is below the horizon which illuminates the lower atmosphere and the Earth s surface The word twilight can also refer to the periods of time when this illumination occurs 2 Twilight is the time period between astronomical dawn and sunrise or between sunset and astronomical dusk Morning twilight astronomical nautical and civil stages at dawn The apparent disk of the Sun is shown to scale 1 Evening twilight civil nautical and astronomical stages at dusk The solar disk is shown to scale The lower the Sun is beneath the horizon the dimmer the twilight other factors such as atmospheric conditions being equal When the Sun reaches 18 below the horizon the twilight s brightness is nearly zero and evening twilight becomes nighttime When the Sun again reaches 18 below the horizon nighttime becomes morning twilight Owing to its distinctive quality primarily the absence of shadows and the appearance of objects silhouetted against the lit sky twilight has long been popular with photographers and painters who often refer to it as the blue hour after the French expression l heure bleue By analogy with evening twilight the word twilight is also sometimes used metaphorically to imply that something is losing strength and approaching its end For example very old people may be said to be in the twilight of their lives The collateral adjective for twilight is crepuscular which may be used to describe the behavior of animals that are most active during this period Contents 1 Definitions by geometry 2 Civil twilight 3 Nautical twilight 4 Astronomical twilight 5 Times of occurrence 5 1 Between day and night 5 2 Lasting from one day to the next 5 3 Between one night and the next 5 4 Lasting for 24 hours 6 Duration 7 On other planets 8 In religion 8 1 Christianity 8 2 Hinduism 8 3 Islam 8 4 Judaism 9 Gallery 10 See also 11 References 12 Footnotes 13 Further reading 14 External linksDefinitions by geometry EditTwilight is defined according to the solar elevation angle 8s which is the position of the geometric center of the Sun relative to the horizon There are three established and widely accepted subcategories of twilight civil twilight nearest the horizon nautical twilight and astronomical twilight farthest from the horizon 2 Civil twilight Edit Civil twilight redirects here For other uses see Civil twilight disambiguation Midtown Manhattan during civil twilight demonstrating blue hour Civil twilight is defined as when the geometric center of the Sun is between 6 below the horizon and the horizon itself 3 4 5 Civil twilight is the period when enough natural light remains that artificial light in towns and cities is not needed In the United States military the initialisms BMCT begin morning civil twilight i e civil dawn and EECT end evening civil twilight i e civil dusk are used to refer to the start of morning civil twilight and the end of evening civil twilight respectively Civil dawn is preceded by morning nautical twilight and civil dusk is followed by evening nautical twilight Civil twilight in a small town in the Mojave Desert Under clear weather conditions civil twilight approximates the limit at which solar illumination suffices for the human eye to clearly distinguish terrestrial objects Enough illumination renders artificial sources unnecessary for most outdoor activities At civil dawn and at civil dusk sunlight clearly defines the horizon while the brightest stars and planets can appear As observed from the Earth see apparent magnitude sky gazers know Venus the brightest planet as the morning star or evening star because they can see it during civil twilight 6 Lawmakers have enshrined the concept of civil twilight Such statutes typically use a fixed period after sunset or before sunrise most commonly 20 30 minutes rather than how many degrees the Sun is below the horizon Examples include when drivers of automobiles must turn on their headlights called lighting up time in the UK when hunting is restricted or when the crime of burglary is to be treated as nighttime burglary which carries stiffer penalties in some jurisdictions The period may affect when extra equipment such as anti collision lights is required for aircraft to operate 7 In the US civil twilight for aviation is defined in Part 1 1 of the Federal Aviation Regulations FARs 8 as the time listed in the American Air Almanac 9 Nautical twilight Edit Evening nautical twilight on Lake Ontario CanadaNautical twilight is defined as when the geometric center of the Sun is between 12 and 6 below the horizon 10 3 5 Long exposure of nautical twilight in a small town in the Mojave DesertBeforeBefore nautical dawn and after nautical dusk sailors cannot navigate via the horizon at sea as they cannot clearly see the horizon 1 failed verification At nautical dawn and nautical dusk the human eye finds it difficult if not impossible to discern traces of illumination near the sunset or sunrise point of the horizon first light after nautical dawn but before civil dawn and nightfall after civil dusk but before nautical dusk citation needed At the beginning of nautical twilight artificial lighting must be used to see terrestrial objects clearly Sailors can take reliable star sightings of well known stars during the stage of nautical twilight when they can distinguish a visible horizon for reference i e after astronomic dawn or before astronomic dusk Under good atmospheric conditions with the absence of other illumination during nautical twilight the human eye may distinguish general outlines of ground objects but cannot participate in detailed outdoor operations 11 Nautical twilight has military considerations as well The initialisms BMNT begin morning nautical twilight i e nautical dawn and EENT end evening nautical twilight i e nautical dusk are used and considered when planning military operations A military unit may treat BMNT and EENT with heightened security e g by standing to in which everyone assumes a defensive position Astronomical twilight Edit Evening astronomical twilight dusk Astronomical twilight is defined as when the geometric center of the Sun is between 18 and 12 below the horizon 3 4 2 Long exposure of astronomical twilight dusk in a small town in the Mojave DesertDuring astronomical twilight the sky is dark enough to permit astronomical observation of point sources of light such as stars except in regions with more intense skyglow due to light pollution moonlight auroras and other sources of light Some critical observations such as of faint diffuse items such as nebulae and galaxies may require observation beyond the limit of astronomical twilight Theoretically the faintest stars detectable by the naked eye those of approximately the sixth magnitude will become visible in the evening at astronomical dusk and become invisible at astronomical dawn 12 Because of light pollution observers in some localities generally in and near large cities may never have the opportunity to view anything but the brightest stars irrespective of the presence of any twilight at all nor to experience anything close to a truly dark sky Times of occurrence Edit World map showing limiting latitudes of each type of twilight during the solstices Between day and night Edit Observers within 48 34 of the Equator within 50 of the Equator in May or November within 57 of the Equator in April or October and within 72 of the Equator on the equinoxes can view twilight twice each day on every date of the year between astronomical dawn nautical dawn or civil dawn and sunrise as well as between sunset and civil dusk nautical dusk or astronomical dusk clarification needed This also occurs for most observers at higher latitudes on many dates throughout the year except those around the summer solstice However at latitudes closer than 9 degrees between 81 and 90 to either Pole the Sun cannot rise above the horizon nor sink more than 18 degrees below it on the same day on any date this example of twilight cannot occur because the angular difference between solar noon and solar midnight elevates less than 18 degrees Lasting from one day to the next Edit source source source source source source source source source source Timelapse video of twilight and sunrise in Gjovik in February 2021 At latitudes greater than 48 34 North or South on dates near the summer solstice twilight can last from sunset to sunrise since the Sun does not sink more than 18 degrees below the horizon so complete darkness does not occur even at solar midnight These latitudes include many densely populated regions of the Earth including the entire United Kingdom and other countries in northern Europe and even parts of central Europe Civil twilight between 60 34 and 65 44 north or south between 62 and 67 10 north or south in May or November between 69 and 74 10 north or south in April or October In the northern hemisphere this includes the center of Iceland Finland Sweden Norway Faroe Islands and Shetland Island In the southern hemisphere this includes parts of the Southern Ocean and the northern tip of the Antarctic Peninsula When civil twilight lasts all night this is also referred as a white night Nautical twilight between 54 34 and 60 34 north or south between 56 and 62 north or south in May or November between 63 and 69 north or south in April or October In the northern hemisphere this includes the center of Russia Canada Estonia Latvia Lithuania and Denmark In the southern hemisphere this includes the southernmost point of South America and Ushuaia in Argentina When nautical twilight lasts all night this does not constitute a white night Astronomical twilight between 48 34 and 54 34 north or south between 50 and 56 north or south in May or November between 57 and 63 north or south in April or October In the northern hemisphere this includes the center of Isle of Man United Kingdom Belarus Ireland Netherlands Poland Germany Belgium Czech Republic Bellingham Washington Orcas Island Washington Vancouver British Columbia Luxembourg Guernsey Ukraine and Slovakia In the southern hemisphere this includes the center of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands Bouvet Island Heard Island Falkland Islands It also includes El Calafate and Rio Gallegos in Argentina and Puerto Natales in Chile When astronomical twilight lasts all night this does not constitute a white night Between one night and the next Edit In Arctic and Antarctic latitudes in wintertime the polar night only rarely produces complete darkness for 24 hours each day This can occur only at locations within 5 5 degrees of latitude of the Pole and there only on dates close to the winter solstice At all other latitudes and dates the polar night includes a daily period of twilight when the Sun is not far below the horizon Around winter solstice when the solar declination changes slowly complete darkness lasts several weeks at the Pole itself e g from May 11 to July 31 at Amundsen Scott South Pole Station a North Pole has the experience of this from November 13 to January 29 Solar noon at civil twilight during a polar night between 67 24 and 72 34 north or south Solar noon at nautical twilight during a polar night between 72 34 and 78 34 north or south Solar noon at astronomical twilight during a polar night between 78 34 and 84 34 north or south Solar noon at night during a polar night between 84 34 and 90 north or south Lasting for 24 hours Edit At latitudes within 9 degrees of either Pole as the Sun s angular elevation difference is less than 18 degrees twilight can last for the entire 24 hours This occurs for one day at latitudes near 9 degrees from the Pole and extends up to several weeks the further toward the Pole one goes The only permanent settlement to experience this condition is Alert Nunavut Canada where it occurs for a week in late February and again in late October Duration Edit The number of daylight hours depends on the latitude and time of year Each pole has continuous daylight near its summer solstice Carpet plot of sunshine at latitude 70 north Carpet plot of sunshine at latitude 50 north Carpet plot of sunshine at the equator Twilight at Paranal Observatory in Chile 13 The duration of twilight depends on the latitude and the time of the year The apparent travel of the Sun occurs at the rate of 15 degrees per hour 360 per day but sunrise and sunset happen typically at oblique angles to the horizon and the actual duration of any twilight period will be a function of that angle being longer for more oblique angles This angle of the Sun s motion with respect to the horizon changes with latitude as well as the time of year affecting the angle of the Earth s axis with respect to the Sun At Greenwich England 51 5 N the duration of civil twilight will vary from 33 minutes to 48 minutes depending on the time of year At the equator civil twilight can last as little as 24 minutes This is true because at low latitudes the Sun s apparent movement is perpendicular to the observer s horizon But at the poles civil twilight can be as long as 2 3 weeks In the Arctic and Antarctic regions twilight if there is any can last for several hours There is no astronomical twilight at the poles near the winter solstice for about 74 days at the North Pole and about 80 days at the South Pole As one gets closer to the Arctic and Antarctic circles the Sun s disk moves toward the observer s horizon at a lower angle The observer s earthly location will pass through the various twilight zones less directly taking more time Within the polar circles twenty four hour daylight is encountered in summer and in regions very close to the poles twilight can last for weeks on the winter side of the equinoxes Outside the polar circles where the angular distance from the polar circle is less than the angle which defines twilight see above twilight can continue through local midnight near the summer solstice The precise position of the polar circles and the regions where twilight can continue through local midnight varies slightly from year to year with Earth s axial tilt The lowest latitudes at which the various twilights can continue through local midnight are approximately 60 561 60 33 43 for civil twilight 54 561 54 33 43 for nautical twilight and 48 561 48 33 43 for astronomical twilight 14 15 Lowest Latitude Twilight Observed at Local Midnight by Month Month Civil Nautical AstronomicalJanuary 60 42 S 54 42 S 48 42 SFebruary 65 42 S 59 42 S 53 42 SMarch 75 42 S 69 42 S 63 42 SApril 69 N 63 N 57 NMay 62 N 56 N 50 NJune 60 33 43 N 54 33 43 N 48 33 43 NJuly 60 42 N 54 42 N 48 42 NAugust 65 42 N 59 42 N 53 42 NSeptember 75 42 N 69 42 N 63 42 NOctober 69 S 63 S 57 SNovember 62 S 56 S 50 SDecember 60 33 43 S 54 33 43 S 48 33 43 SThese are the largest cities of their respective countries where the various twilights can continue through local solar midnight Civil twilight from sunset to sunrise Tampere Umea Trondheim Torshavn Reykjavik Nuuk Whitehorse Anchorage Arkhangelsk and Baltasound In the Southern Hemisphere there are no major permanent settlements far enough south to experience this Nautical twilight from civil dusk to civil dawn Saint Petersburg Moscow Vitebsk Vilnius Riga Tallinn Wejherowo Flensburg Helsinki Stockholm Copenhagen Oslo Newcastle upon Tyne Edinburgh Glasgow Belfast Letterkenny Petropavl Nanortalik Grande Prairie Juneau Ushuaia and Puerto Williams Astronomical twilight from nautical dusk to nautical dawn Hulun Buir Erdenet Nur Sultan Samara Kyiv Minsk Alytus Warsaw Kosice Paris Dublin Zwettl Prague Stanley Falkland Islands Berlin Hamburg Luxembourg City Brussels Amsterdam London Cardiff Vancouver Calgary Unalaska Bellingham largest in the continental USA Rio Gallegos and Punta Arenas Major cities that near astronomical twilight from nautical dusk to nautical dawn Khabarovsk 48 29 0 N Dnipro 48 27 0 N Victoria 48 25 42 N Saguenay 48 25 0 N Brest 48 23 26 N Thunder Bay 48 22 56 N Vienna 48 12 30 N Bratislava 48 8 38 N Munich 48 8 0 N Although Helsinki Oslo Stockholm Tallinn and Saint Petersburg also enter into nautical twilight after sunset they do have noticeably lighter skies at night during the summer solstice than other locations mentioned in their category above because they do not go far into nautical twilight A white night is a night with only civil twilight which lasts from sunset to sunrise 16 At the winter solstice within the polar circle twilight can extend through solar noon at latitudes below 72 561 72 33 43 for civil twilight 78 561 78 33 43 for nautical twilight and 84 561 84 33 43 for astronomical twilight On other planets EditTwilight on Mars is longer than on Earth lasting for up to two hours before sunrise or after sunset Dust high in the atmosphere scatters light to the night side of the planet Similar twilights are seen on Earth following major volcanic eruptions 17 In religion EditChristianity Edit American Benedictine monks around an Easter fire preparing to light the Paschal candle prior to Easter Vigil mass In Christian practice vigil observances often occur during twilight on the evening before major feast days or holidays For example the Easter Vigil is held in the hours of darkness between sunset on Holy Saturday and sunrise on Easter Day most commonly in the evening of Holy Saturday or midnight and is the first celebration of Easter days traditionally being considered to begin at sunset Hinduism Edit Twilight is sacred in Hinduism It is called ग ध ळ व ळ gōdhuḷiveḷ in Sanskrit or ग ध ल व ल godhulivela in Hindi గ ధ ళ వ ళ godhoolivela in Telugu literally cow dust time Many rituals including Sandhyavandanam and Puja are performed at twilight hour Eating of food is not advised during this time Sometimes it is referred to as Asurasandhya vela It is believed that Asuras are active during these hours One of the avatars of Lord Vishnu Narasimha is closely associated with the twilight period According to Hindu scriptures a daemonic king Hiranakashipa performed penance and obtained a boon from Brahma that he could not be killed during day or night neither by human nor animal neither inside his house nor outside Lord Vishnu appeared in a half man half lion form neither human nor animal ended the life of Hiranakashipa sitting on the doorstep neither inside nor outside during twilight neither day nor night 18 Islam Edit Twilight is important in Islam as it determines when certain universally obligatory prayers are to be recited Morning twilight is when morning prayers Fajr are done while evening twilight is the time for evening prayers Maghrib prayer Also during Ramadhan the time for suhoor morning meal before fasting ends at morning twilight while fasting ends after sunset There is also an important discussion in Islamic jurisprudence between true dawn and false dawn Judaism Edit In Judaism twilight is considered neither day nor night consequently it is treated as a safeguard against encroachment upon either It can be considered a liminal time For example the twilight of Friday is reckoned as Sabbath eve and that of Saturday as Sabbath day and the same rule applies to festival days 19 Gallery Edit View from the Chiang Kai shek Memorial Hall at evening civil twilight Taipei Taiwan Morning twilight mountain moonset Midsummer twilight over Rainbow Ridge Landers California Clouds begin to glow with colors at nautical dawn the second stage of twilight when the Sun is 12 degrees below the horizon Characteristic polar night blue twilight Longyearbyen Svalbard located at 78 north Nautical twilight in the Gulf of Thailand Twilight in Goa India Early civil twilight in Moscow RussiaSee also EditBelt of Venus Diffuse sky radiation Earth s shadow visible at twilight Gloom Green flash Polar nightReferences Edit a b Van Flandern T K Pulkkinen 1980 Low precision formulae for planetary positions Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series 31 3 391 Bibcode 1979ApJS 41 391V doi 10 1086 190623 a b c Definitions from the US Astronomical Applications Dept USNO Archived from the original on 2019 09 27 Retrieved 2011 07 22 a b c ftp ftp flaterco com xtide Bowditch pdf 238 permanent dead link The American Practical Navigator 2002 page 238 a b http msi nga mil MSISiteContent StaticFiles NAV PUBS APN Gloss 1 pdf 9 Archived 2017 08 29 at the Wayback Machine Glossary of Marine Navigation a b http www ast cam ac uk public ask 2445 University of Cambridge Institute of Astronomy Ask an Astronomer NB questionable source as its sources refer back to Wikipedia What Is Civil Twilight www timeanddate com 14 CFR 121 323 Title 14 Aeronautics and Space PART 1 Definitions ELECTRONIC CODE OF FEDERAL REGULATIONS U S Government Publishing Office The Air Almanac aa usno navy mil What Is Nautical Twilight www timeanddate com Rise Set and Twilight Definitions Archived from the original on 2015 08 14 Retrieved 2007 09 06 What Is Astronomical Twilight www timeanddate com Venus and the Moon strike a pose Retrieved 18 April 2016 Length of Day and Twilight Formulas www gandraxa com Retrieved 2011 08 26 Herbert Glarner s website reference 2 Civil Twilight 6 Nautical Twilight 12 90 Axis 23 439 12 54 561 white night Wiktionary 4 May 2022 NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory Winter Solstice on Mars Rovers Look Forward to A Second Martian Spring August 07 2006 Jossleyn Hennessy 1955 ch VII Education in the villages Cow dust time India democracy and education Orient Longmans p 127 SUN RISING AND SETTING OF THE JewishEncyclopedia com www jewishencyclopedia com Footnotes Edit This is the range of dates when the Sun is more than 18 degrees north of the Celestial equator so it is more than 18 degrees below the horizon as seen from the South Pole See Position of the Sun Declination of the Sun as seen from Earth Further reading EditMateshvili Nina Didier Fussen Filip Vanhellemont Christine Bingen Erkki Kyrola Iuri Mateshvili Giuli Mateshvili 2005 Twilight sky brightness measurements as a useful tool for stratospheric aerosol investigations Journal of Geophysical Research 110 D09209 D09209 Bibcode 2005JGRD 11009209M doi 10 1029 2004JD005512 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Twilight Look up twilight or gloaming in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Twilight Twilight Calculator Compute twilight times Twilight time calculator Archived 2011 10 14 at the Wayback Machine Formulae to calculate twilight duration archived by Herbert Glarner The colors of twilight and sunset HM Nautical Almanac Office Websurf Compute twilight times Geoscience Australia Sunrise and sunset times Compute twilight times An Excel workbook with VBA functions for twilight dawn and dusk sunrise solar noon sunset and solar position azimuth and elevation by Greg Pelletier translated from NOAA s online calculator for sunrise sunset Time and Date to find the current state of the sun in a specified place Portals Weather Environment Astronomy Stars Geography Earth sciences Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Twilight amp oldid 1131235079 Nautical twilight, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.