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The scientific reasons for Earth’s seasons

Mon Mar 19, 2012 1:03 PM EDT
science, only-on-msnbc-com, northern-hemisphere
msnbc.com News — Paige Williams, msnbc.com - Only on msnbc.com
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— The seasons are a powerful force in our lives. They affect the activities we do, the foods we crave, the clothes we wear — and quite often, the moods we are in. The seasons officially change once again on Tuesday, with spring beginning in the Northern Hemisphere and autumn starting in the south.

What is it that causes the change in seasons?

The ability to predict the seasons — by tracking the rising and setting points of the sun throughout the year — was key to survival in ancient times. The Babylonians, the Maya and other cultures developed complex systems for monitoring seasonal shifts. But it took centuries more to unravel the science behind the seasons.

Nicolai Copernicus (1473-1543) radically changed our understanding of astronomy when he proposed that the sun, not Earth, was the center of the solar system. This led to our modern understanding of the relationship between the sun and Earth.

We now know that Earth orbits the sun elliptically and, at the same time, spins on an axis that is tilted relative to its plane of orbit. This means that different hemispheres are exposed to different amounts of sunlight throughout the year. Because the sun is our source of light, energy and heat, the changing intensity and concentration of its rays give rise to the seasons of winter, spring, summer and fall.

Solstices and equinoxes
The seasons are marked by solstices and equinoxes — astronomical terms that relate to Earth’s tilt.

The solstices mark the points at which the poles are tilted at their maximum toward or away from the sun. This is when the difference between the daylight hours and the nighttime hours is most acute. The solstices occur each year on June 20 or 21 and Dec. 21 or 22, and represent the official start of the summer and winter seasons.

The vernal equinox and autumnal equinox herald the beginning of spring and fall, respectively. At these times of the year, the sun appears to be directly over Earth’s equator, and the lengths of the day and the night are equal over most of the planet.

On March 20 or 21 of each year, the Northern Hemisphere reaches the vernal equinox and enjoys the signs of spring. At the same time, the winds turn colder in the Southern Hemisphere as the autumnal equinox sets in.

The year's other equinox occurs on Sept. 22 or 23, when summer fades to fall in the north, and winter’s chill starts giving way to spring in the south.

From year to year, there is always some variability in the equinoxes and solstices because of the way Earth's changing tilt matches up with its orbit around the sun. This year, the precise moment of the March equinox comes at 1:14 a.m. ET Tuesday. That's the moment when the sun is exactly overhead, as seen from the point on Earth's equator directly facing the sun at that time.

Tuesday is thus the day that comes the closest to offering equal amounts of sunlight and darkness all over the globe — at least until the September equinox.

Effect on climate
Here’s how the seasonal change affects the weather: Around the time of the June solstice, the North Pole is tilted toward the sun and the Northern Hemisphere is starting to enjoy summer. The density of the solar radiation is higher because it's coming from directly overhead — in other words, the sun's rays are concentrated over a smaller surface area. The days are longer, too, meaning that more radiation is absorbed in northern climes during the 24-hour cycle. Another factor that may come into play is that the radiation takes a somewhat shorter path through the energy-absorbing atmosphere before striking the earth.

At the same time that the Northern Hemisphere is entering summer, the South Pole is tilted away from the sun, and the Southern Hemisphere is starting to feel the cold of winter. The sun’s glancing rays are spread over a greater surface area and must travel through more of the atmosphere before reaching the earth. There are also fewer hours of daylight in a 24-hour period.

The situations are reversed in December, when it’s the Southern Hemisphere that basks in the most direct rays of the sun, while the Northern Hemisphere receives less dense solar radiation for shorter periods of time.

Although the solstices represent the pinnacles of summer and winter with respect to the intensity of the sun’s rays, they do not usually represent the year's warmest or coldest days. This is because temperature depends not only on the amount of heat the atmosphere receives from the sun, but also on the amount of heat it loses due to the absorption of this heat by the ground and ocean.

It is not until the ground and oceans absorb enough heat to reach equilibrium with the temperature of the atmosphere that we feel the coldest days of winter or hottest days of summer.

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  • Public Discussion (50)
Dr. Zook

There are scientific reasons for the change of seasons?

No way!  It's just the will of God!

It's in Revelations people!!!

  • 5 votes
Reply#1 - Sat Dec 20, 2008 5:50 PM EST
GodschildNC

Also Dr. Zook it is in Genesis and I agree with you all the way.. God did all this !!!!

And as for Al Gore sick of hearing about Global Warming cause you can't stop what God sets into motion !!!! He might want to dust off his Bible and read it again!!!!!

  • 1 vote
#1.1 - Sun Jun 21, 2009 11:17 PM EDT
Kev77

The author of this article did not even mention the Creator even once. So what was the purpose of the article? To tell us something we already knew. Why waste space if you are not even going to mention God? God created the seasons and He created the stars and the moon so we would know when His appointed times are. So we would know when the true beginning of months are. Praise the Lord in all His creation!

  • 1 vote
#1.2 - Mon Jun 22, 2009 1:29 AM EDT
Save Me Jebus

That's because it's an article about science, not theology.

    #1.3 - Mon Jun 22, 2009 10:53 AM EDT
    Reply
    Dr. Zook

    Yay!  I'm leading the conversation!

    I am so smart!  I am so smart!  S - M - R - T!!!  S - M - R - T!!!

    I mean "S - M - A - R - T".

    Oooops.

    • 2 votes
    Reply#2 - Sat Dec 20, 2008 5:52 PM EST
    Timothy S

    D'oH!!!

    • 1 vote
    #2.1 - Sun Jun 21, 2009 9:37 AM EDT
    Reply
    ken from illinoisDeleted
    kc1979

    This is 5th grade science.  Why the hell is this a story?

    No doubt a global warming agenda somehow.  It's the only reason MSNBC would have this story.

    • 4 votes
    Reply#4 - Sat Dec 20, 2008 6:38 PM EST
    chollaDeleted
    Shot a man in Reno...

    It may be 5th grade science, but >20 years ago, in a college geography class of ~30 people only 2 knew that this was the reason for the seasons, most thought that the earth was closer to the sun during the northen hemisphere's summer and that this gave us the seasons.

    At least it is not an article on that true science, astology.

      #4.2 - Sun Jun 21, 2009 3:03 PM EDT
      Louie Lou

      Why do some people have to inject politics into every singe thing?!! I think they need to get out more and live life. Letting go is the first step, people.

        #4.3 - Mon Jun 22, 2009 3:02 AM EDT
        Tom-495906

        Actually, under our current orbital state, the Earth is at its FARTHEST from the sun, at its aphelion point in its orbit, during the northern summer.

        And I learned all this in the SECOND GRADE. Reading an ENCYCLOPAEDIA.

        Americans truly are some of the most ignorant people on this planet.

          #4.4 - Wed Sep 23, 2009 9:49 AM EDT
          Stumpjumper

          Tom-496906: You are right. And if it was reversed, earth closest to the sun during the Northern Summer we would be in deep....well you know. Yea its second grade science but many people still don't know, or care to learn, why things are the way they are. They only want to blame AGW for everything because that's all they hear.

          Over time the earth will be closest during northern summer. Just imagine what the temps will run then.

            #4.5 - Tue Jun 21, 2011 11:35 AM EDT
            Reply
            Polar-782070

            I believe there are statements in this article which at best are open to misinterpretation and therefore misunderstanding, and at worst are wrong.

            E.g. "The sun’s glancing rays are spread over a greater surface area and must travel through more of the atmosphere before reaching the earth."

            The sun illuminated surface area depends on the distance between the earth and sun which is least around the beginning of the new year.

            "From year to year, there is always some variability in the equinoxes and solstices because of the way Earth's changing tilt matches up with its orbit around the sun."

            The major factor in the variation of the dates for the equinoxes and solstices is because the time for the earth to orbit the sun is not an integer number of days (i.e. 365). The changing tilt is way too slow to have a noticeable effect year to year.

              Reply#5 - Sat Dec 20, 2008 7:41 PM EST
              Ernie Mercer-371446

              "The sun illuminated surface area depends on the distance between the earth and sun which is least around the beginning of the new year."

              The Earth's orbit is nearly a perfect circle, with an eccentricity of only .02. There is minimal varaiation in heating by the Sun because of it. Our orbit precesses over time, and so do the times of the year that the minimum and maximum distances occur.

              As you said, the time it takes to orbit the sun is not exactly 365 days. Every 4 years (leap year) an extra day is added to the calendar to compensate, and reset the equinoxes & soltices.

                #5.1 - Sat Jun 20, 2009 9:46 PM EDT
                Len-335365

                Gee, Polar, it's really too bad you've never really studied this, isn't it?

                Try taking an intro-geology course - maybe you'll find out that there are a number of 'wobbles' that occur and these 'wobbles', rotations, and tilts - either additive or subtractive - account for variations in the climate, not man's pitiful contribution to a necessary, but somewhat benign gas.

                  #5.2 - Sun Jun 21, 2009 11:41 PM EDT
                  Stumpjumper

                  There is a 5 million KM difference in the earths closest and farthest distance from the sun. This difference means the southern hemisphere receives about 6.9% more energy from the sun than the northern hemisphere does. I wouldn't say that is minimal. When talking about 6.9% coming from the sun, that is A LOT of energy.

                    #5.3 - Tue Jun 21, 2011 11:45 AM EDT
                    Reply
                    Amy-458412Deleted
                    Bored newsseeker

                    I vividly remember learning those basics at the age of 6 or 7 in primary school, along with the alphabet. Why is this portrayed as a revelation of some sort? Why is this news? Did we just discover what Equinoxes or Solstices were/are? This is sad, or maybe it is just another way to fluff a web page.

                    • 3 votes
                    Reply#7 - Mon Dec 22, 2008 4:26 AM EST
                    Virgo47

                    24-hour news cycle + dumb americans = stories like this

                      #7.1 - Sun Jun 21, 2009 2:37 PM EDT
                      Taliesyn

                      Look at comment number 5 and ask yourself this question again. You'd be surprised how many so-called educated adults just don't get this and think it's due to proximity to the sun, despite the fact that the northern and southern hemispheres have opposing seasons.

                        #7.2 - Sun Jun 21, 2009 9:52 PM EDT
                        pete-776297

                        There are also a lot of folks who can't even fine their own state on a map.

                          #7.3 - Sun Jun 21, 2009 10:12 PM EDT
                          Stumpjumper

                          Especially if you are the 51st thru 57th state. :)

                            #7.4 - Tue Jun 21, 2011 11:46 AM EDT
                            Reply
                            Andy Groeneveld

                            I think the reason this should be a story is it's a fact the a huge number of Americans DO NOT know this information.

                            We all think this is a non-story because we have a proper education. Unfortunately too many of our neighbors do not.

                            • 1 vote
                            Reply#8 - Thu Mar 19, 2009 1:11 PM EDT
                            dbtmellis

                            Whos fault is is that your neigbor is undeducated?

                            Certainly not mine and i hope it isnt yours!

                              #8.1 - Mon Jun 22, 2009 2:40 AM EDT
                              Reply
                              sharon walkerDeleted
                              TheNewAtheist

                              They run this "story" like 6 times a year, are you telling me there is nothing more interesting in the world of science then something we all learned in 2nd grade? Seriously, I dont know one elementary school student who wouldn't know this.

                              www.thenewatheist.com

                                Reply#10 - Fri Mar 20, 2009 12:34 PM EDT
                                Ernie Mercer-371446

                                I think you'd be surprised at the number of ADULTS who don't know this.

                                • 1 vote
                                #10.1 - Sat Jun 20, 2009 9:58 PM EDT
                                dbtmellis

                                I am suprised at the number of adults who might not know this, chances are its much higher that i can imagine.

                                  #10.2 - Mon Jun 22, 2009 2:43 AM EDT
                                  Reply
                                  Gabriel-1142959

                                  I was once stupid enough to think that if we explode a couple of nuclear bombs in the north and south poles, we can keep the water level down from global warming. But, the ice caps also help the temperatures from rising and the fall out would be to dangerous.

                                    Reply#11 - Sat Jun 20, 2009 9:52 PM EDT
                                    Timothy S

                                    You mean that graphic is not to scale?

                                      Reply#12 - Sun Jun 21, 2009 9:38 AM EDT
                                      Shot a man in Reno...

                                      Nor the states and countries borders viewable from the sky, a la Warner Bros. cartoons.

                                        #12.1 - Sun Jun 21, 2009 3:06 PM EDT
                                        Reply
                                        godman

                                        Why print a article about something everyone learned in 4th. grade? Is America this stupid?

                                          Reply#13 - Sun Jun 21, 2009 6:00 PM EDT
                                          dbtmellis

                                          With standarized testing now, many dont know this by 4th grade. So to a small few, this IS new stuff to them.

                                            #13.1 - Mon Jun 22, 2009 12:17 AM EDT
                                            Reply
                                            godman

                                            Well, I guess I answered my own question. Many people believe in me.

                                              Reply#14 - Sun Jun 21, 2009 6:07 PM EDT
                                              1Mom-1169039

                                              I agree with KC1979 and godman.

                                              Why would you even read this since you should already know this stuff?

                                              If Jay Leno was still on the Tonight Show, this would be great for 'Jaywalking' just to see the morons fumble through this.

                                              • 1 vote
                                              Reply#15 - Sun Jun 21, 2009 7:46 PM EDT
                                              bstn2la

                                              Come on everyone stop being so critical, Sarah Palin didnt know this!!

                                                Reply#16 - Sun Jun 21, 2009 8:52 PM EDT
                                                Jim-395530

                                                There was really never any doubt. We must all unplug our modems now, and go play frisbee with our dog on the beach. If this is the only garbage they can feed us, America is doomed. Wait! Maybe Bin Ladin is feeding us his nonsense?!

                                                  Reply#17 - Sun Jun 21, 2009 9:02 PM EDT
                                                  CJ-422762

                                                  Great! Thanks for the 3rd grade astronomy lesson. This is worthy of putting on MSN home page??? Guess it was a slow news...YEAR, maybe decade????

                                                  Are the publishers of this page even awake today?

                                                    Reply#18 - Sun Jun 21, 2009 10:40 PM EDT
                                                    jd-1169199

                                                    I feel stupider for having just read any of this..................

                                                      Reply#19 - Sun Jun 21, 2009 11:27 PM EDT
                                                      dbtmellis

                                                      Then stop reading past this point

                                                        #19.1 - Mon Jun 22, 2009 2:38 AM EDT
                                                        Reply
                                                        dbtmellis

                                                        A day is not 24 hours, its acutally 23hrs, 56 mintues. Which means a full year is 1460 mintues (or 24.3 days) shorter than we think it is. This is also why we have a "leap" year every 4 years, to "reset" the calander, without it slowly over time the 4th of July will be in the Dead of winter.

                                                          Reply#20 - Mon Jun 22, 2009 12:15 AM EDT
                                                          jackle61

                                                          dbtmellis; I'm sorry, but, I really hope you mean there are 1460 minutes in 24.3 hours,,,, not days.

                                                          I can't believe this article even has to be written. If anyone past the 5th grade doesn't know this,,, just say "the eath is tilted, it moves around the sun, so it seems like it tilts back and forth" because if they don't already know this, the article will just confuse them.

                                                            #20.1 - Mon Jun 22, 2009 1:09 AM EDT
                                                            dbtmellis

                                                            yes i meant hours

                                                              #20.2 - Mon Jun 22, 2009 2:38 AM EDT
                                                              Tom-495906

                                                              And what the hell does that have to do with ANYTHING???

                                                              The length of the 'day' is measured by how fast the earth rotates on its axis, the year by how long it takes the earth to make one complete orbit around the sun, either sidereal or tropic (our calendar is tropic). The one has absolutely NOTHING to do with the other, besides the fact that one of the devisions we use to divide up the year is how many times the earth rotates on its axis during one complete tropical orbit, which turns out to be 365 days, 6 hours, and some minutes give or take each year. We have leap years because our 365 day calendars are too SHORT, as the year is slighty longer than the number of days, by 6 hours or so. So, we add leap days every four years, excepting years ending in 00 NOT divisible by 400, in order to keep the calendar current with earth's orbit, basically smooshing those four left over 6 hours into one day, you know, 6 times 4 equal 24. The basic point, being, the length of a year is based on the time it takes the earth to complete one orbit around the sun, not how fast or slow it turns on its axis.

                                                              And people here wonder why articles like this are in fact breaking news to 90% of amnericans.

                                                                #20.3 - Wed Sep 23, 2009 10:17 AM EDT
                                                                Reply
                                                                Bob Hammond

                                                                I learned about the scientific explaination of the seasons in grammer school over 50 years ago. Why is there a need for this article at this point in time? Of course, the real explaination for the seasons is that GOD ordained them, so they are.

                                                                  Reply#21 - Mon Jun 22, 2009 10:58 AM EDT
                                                                  Save Me Jebus

                                                                  That's funny Bob. Thanks, I've been having a pretty busy day and I needed that laugh.

                                                                    #21.1 - Tue Jun 23, 2009 2:22 PM EDT
                                                                    Reply
                                                                    dhstraayer

                                                                    The article claims that fall begins officially on the equinox.

                                                                    What I'd like to know is, official by whose declaration?

                                                                    As I see it, there are three ways of defining seasons:

                                                                    1: Astronomical.  This, by the way, is the way our ancestors defined seasons.  Note that the old English term for the winter solstice is "midwinter", and for the summer solstice is "midsummer".  The winter solstice is the exact middle of the astronomical winter: the quarter of the year with least sunlight.  In a time lit only by fire, our ancestors were much more finely tuned to the heavens than are we today. 

                                                                    2: Climate.  We could define winter as the coldest 1/4 of the year, summer as the warmest, etc.  Based on a sine regression of mid-latitude temperatures, in the northern hemisphere, this would put the beginning of winter about the 9th or 10th of December, and preserve the usual association of December, January, and February as the "Winter months".  With the solstice not until about the 21st, the "official" season designations would put December as a fall month, not a winter month.  But of course, everybody takes December to be a winter month.  Why is the Climate definition of calendars skewed from the astronomical?  The reason is the phenomenon of hysteresis, or lag.  It takes time for the seas and land to warm and cool.  Today, with abundant artificial light, but a need to change clothing to match the seasons, a climate-based definition is more natural than our forefather's astronomical system.

                                                                    3: The "Official" or pseudo-precise.  Our current "official" seasons lag the astronomical ones by 1/8 of a year (or Pi/4, for the radian users).  This has the advantage of the very precise and round number of Pi/4 (just kidding) as the lag of temperature behind solar radiation.  Precise, round, and pure bunkum.  There is no reason that this lag should be a "pure number" like 1/8 or Pi/4, but simply is what it is due to the thermal properties of land, water, and air.  Clearly the inventors of "official" seasons wanted to preserve the link to astronomically significant solstices and equinoxes, but wanted to make their seasons more climate-oriented than astronomical seasons.  But this puffery of Pi/4 phase lag is self-important nonsense. 

                                                                    So here is my proposal: admit that summer is the warmest quarter of the year, winter the coldest, and spring and autumn are the transitional quarters.  Stop trying to tell people sweltering in the second week of June, or freezing in the second week of December, that they have to wait two weeks to come to their senses.  If you don't like the astronomical imprecision of the 10th of the month for a transition, live with it.  Lots of things in science aren't what we want, but what they are.  Season are among these things.

                                                                     

                                                                      Reply#22 - Tue Sep 22, 2009 9:35 PM EDT
                                                                      Tom-495906

                                                                      Boy, I thought the two idiots discussing how the earth's rotation on its axis is the reason we have leap years was dumb. but you have gone on to the grad level of idiocy.

                                                                      Your points.

                                                                      1. The solstice and midwinter or midsummer. They mean basically the same thing in modified latin or modifed english. The solstice is point at which the sun, depending on which hemisphere you are talking about, is at its highest or lowest point in the sky, and the hours of daylight are at there highest or lowest point. Solstice literally mean sun stopping, which is what is happening in a way, since the sun is either stopping its climb in summer or its fall in winter, and reversing its apparent motion. So, I have no idea what you're whining about there.

                                                                      2. Climate. sorry your definiation of 'winter' doesn't even come close to mine. For example, in central Minnesota, in the late 60's thru the early 80's 'winter' started about the second week of November with the first snowfall that stuck to the end of March/beginning of April when that last signifcant snowfall fell. And, if you include melting, then winter ended in late April. Spring ran April thru mid June. Summer started about mid June and would run until the first weeks of September. Fall was the later part of September, and October, and maybe a week in November, and then the snow came again. That would have made our Spring about two and half months long, Summer almost three months, Fall about two months and Winter about FOUR AND A HALF MONTHS. Since the 1980's, winter has shrunk to the last week of December thru the first week of March, Spring has moved back into March, Summer still starts in mid June, but now runs all the way thru September, and Fall is October, November and the bulk of December. Winter is now about half as long as it used to be. so much for 'climate'.

                                                                      And, as for astronomical vs. climate, what the hell are you talking about? The solstices measure the high low points of the sun in the sky, the equinoxes measure the point at which the sun is at mid point, and the day from pole to pole is exactly 12 hours long. end of story.

                                                                      3 ?????????? psuedo whatzzitz? What the hell are you talking about? What the hell does Pi, or the thermal properties of water or anything like that have to do with the seasons per say, and their relationship between the solstices and the equinoxes? And as for the good old days, well, what the hell do you think Stonehenge was for and why do you think those guys lined up hundreds of tons of stones to figure out when the solstices and equinoxes would happen? Seems they thought it was pretty important, and being a bunch of agricultruralists, I think knowing the seasons mattered to them, since even they understood that the longer the sun is in the sky, the warmer it is.

                                                                      And this whole thing is that you don't like the weatherman saying the first day of summer falls on the summer solstice? Fine. Whatever.

                                                                        #22.1 - Wed Sep 23, 2009 10:59 AM EDT
                                                                        Reply
                                                                        Jim-395530

                                                                        what happened to american education? nwe used to know this stuff in grade school. there are so many misconceptions presented above that it makes me wish i was chinese.

                                                                        American Idiots

                                                                          Reply#23 - Mon May 30, 2011 8:39 AM EDT
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