Posted on 12/21/2014 10:48:25 AM PST by LucyT
Today, you might already know, is the winter solstice. That means for people living in the Northern Hemisphere, it's the longest night of the year.
However, as science blogger Colin Schultz points out, tonight will also be the longest night ever. At any location in the Northern Hemisphere, in other words, tonight's period of darkness will be slightly longer than any other, ever at least, since the planet started spinning right around the time it was first formed some 4.5 billion years ago.
The reason is that the rotation of the Earth is slowing over time. Every year, scientists estimate, the length of a day increases by about 15 to 25 millionths of a second.
(Excerpt) Read more at msn.com ...
By day I mean the hours and minutes of light.
Actually, if you moved a huge mass to the EQUATOR it would slow down the Earth's rotation - in theory.
O. Noes! It will be all the way down to 70 on Christmas day!!
Does this mean it will also be the longest day in history NEXT year?
I think you’re right — I got it backwards.
Good. I could use the extra sleep.
What do you mean they "estimate"? You mean the science isn't even settled on THIS?
Why don't they take a vote and come up with a consensus.
Thanks. I always look forward to when the days are getting longer.
Good one !!!!! So true
With what we’ve got in the White House and congress, you could see this striding down Main Street with a neon sign on its head.
I really miss that 25ths of a millisecond of sleep from last year
How far in the future would we have to go to get 25 hour days
This is one gigantic cosmic bait-and-switch.
Stupid solar system.
Correction: the longest day was in 1912.
http://www.vox.com/2014/12/21/7424371/winter-solstice and links therein.
Since then, they have gotten shorter because of global warming or something.
"Correction: the longest day was in 1912."
" http://www.vox.com/2014/12/21/7424371/winter-solstice and links therein.
"Since then, they have gotten shorter because of global warming or something."
From the article:
Correction: The article below said that, due to the rotation of the Earth gradually slowing down over time, this winter solstice would feature the longest night ever.
I got this wrong. The Earth's rotation is gradually slowing on an extremely long timescale, but on a shorter year-to-year basis, geologic factors can alter the speed as well.
Data indicates that the rotation speed has actually sped up slightly over the past forty years (likely due to melting of ice at the poles and the resulting redistribution of the Earth's mass), and before that, the trend was up-and-down for most of the 20th century so, as far as we know, the longest night in Earth's history likely occurred in 1912. I apologize for the error. Thanks to Steve Allen and Ryan Hardy for pointing it out.
Thank you for the update, Chaguito. FreeRepublic strives for accuracy.
Also check out # 77.
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