tudorsailor
Well-Known Member
How is it that British Summer Time starts 14 weeks after the shortest day, but ends 7 weeks before the shortest day. Why is it not equal?
Just curious
TS
Just curious
TS
It's arbritary. Why should it be equal?
It's because the earth's orbit around the sun is not circular it is roughly eliptical and the earths distance from the sun is closer at one end of the orbit than at the other
The longest and shortest days don't coincide with when the earth is at its futhest or nearest points to the sun ( that's aphelion and perihelion) but rather when the inclination of the earth's axis is greatest towards and away from the sun.
That occurs at the points in the orbit where the rate of change from the small radius at the ends of it major axis and the large radius and the ends of the minor axis is at its greatest..
Ok summer time starts 14 weeks after the shortest day but the corresponding change in the geometry as the earth leaves the tighter curved part of the orbit is only 7 weeks.
Hope you can follow that. Not easy to explain.
Don't quote me I may not have all the detail exactly correct.
I don't see why the fact that currently perihelion is about a fortnight after the solstice is relevant. The point is Daylight Saving, and length of daylight is to a close approximation symmetrical about the solstice.
In the Navy when adjusting clocks they use the 'stuff up the workers' principle, so when going West and the clocks go back they do it during the day so work carries on for an extra hour, and when heading East and clocks go forward they do it during the night so you start work an hour earlier.
Whilst this isn't exactly relevant I suspect that it's more for the convenience of various departments than for strictly astronomical reasons.
On our ships the clocks were adjusted so that noon was always after lunch in order that it didn t interfere with the mates attending the lunch table at 12
The change done on the night watches.