Earth farthest from sun
4th
July, 2014 – Aphelion day
We all know that
earth goes round and round around the sun. Well it almost does that but there a
small twist to the statement. It ALMOST goes in a circle. Thanks to Kepler, who
gave us insight into how these wanderers go around the sun, all planets in our solar
system travel around the Sun in elliptical orbits. It's Kepler's 1st Law. Some
planets go around sun in more elliptical orbit than others. Most planets follow
orbits that are more elliptical than Earth's orbit. So in a sense earth’s orbit
is closest to being a circle in the whole solar family. Even then the slight
deviation from a circle gives us two positions of earth when it’s farthest and
closest to sun.
The orbits of
Mercury (red), Earth (blue) and Mars (black). The solid lines indicate each
planet's elliptical path around the Sun. The dotted lines show circular paths
with the same mean separation from the center. Earth is almost exactly the same
distance from the Sun at aphelion and perihelion, but the orbits of Mars and
Mercury depart significantly from a circle.
On July 4th, 2014
at 15 hrs UT or at 20:30 IST, the Earth is at its farthest point from the Sun
(aphelion), the distance at that time is 152,097,040 km, which is about 5
million km further away than its closest point in early January. It does appear
strange that in July we have earth farthest away from sun. Isn’t it? And to top
it all total energy received from sun by the globe on aphelion is around 7%
less than what we receive when it is closest to the sun (perihelion).
Now you may ask
if sun is farthest then why is the temperature not going down? There are many reasons to it. Blame it on the
tilt of earth’s axis. Actually, our seasons are determined by the tilt of the
Earth and not by how close the Earth is to the Sun. Well that’s another story
to tell.
Sunlight raises
the temperature of continents more than it does oceans. (Land has a lower heat
capacity than water) In July (aphelion) the land-crowded northern half of our
planet is tilted toward the Sun. Aphelion sunlight is around 7% less than
sunlight at perihelion, but it nevertheless does a good job warming the
continents. In fact, say climate scientists, northern summer in July when the
Sun is more distant than usual is a bit warmer than its southern counterpart in
January.
So enjoy the warm
or rather scorching sun (or cloudy day!) on 4th July as a
celebration to the Aphelion day.
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