What is the shortest day of the year daylight hours?

Sydneysiders will experience the shortest day of the year on Tuesday as about nine hours and 53 minutes of daylight mark the winter solstice.

The tilt of the earth and the specific point that it will be at in its oval-shaped trajectory around the sun mean the southern hemisphere will be at its furthest point from the sun.

What is the shortest day of the year daylight hours?

In Sydney, the winter solstice will mean about four-and-a-half fewer daylight hours than on the city’s longest day, which will occur on December 22 and have about 14 hours and 24 minutes of daylight.

However, it doesn’t signal the coldest day of the year, which is likely to occur some time next month.

Meteorologist Jordan Notara said that while fewer daylight hours meant the amount of solar radiation was at a minimum, that was not the only factor that drove temperatures.

What is the shortest day of the year daylight hours?
Satellite views of Earth on the solstices and equinoxes. From left to right, a June solstice, a September equinox, a December solstice, a March equinox. Read more about these images, which are via Robert Simmon (Sigma Space Corporation)/NASA.

No matter where you live on Earth’s globe – no matter what time it happens for you – the solstice is your signal to celebrate seasonal change.

What is it? The December solstice marks the sun’s southernmost point in our sky for this year.
When is the next one? The next December solstice will fall on Wednesday, December 21, 2022, at 21:48 UTC (that is 3:48 p.m. in central North America; translate UTC to your time).
Note: On this solstice, the sun will be overhead at noon as viewed from the Tropic of Capricorn. For us in the Northern Hemisphere, the December solstice will mark the longest nights and shortest days of the year. For the Southern Hemisphere, it will mark the shortest nights and longest days. After this solstice, the sun will moving north again.

What is the shortest day of the year daylight hours?
View larger. | Ian Hennes in Medicine Hat, Alberta, Canada, created this solargraph between a June solstice and a December solstice. It shows the path of the sun during that time period. Thank you, Ian!
What is the shortest day of the year daylight hours?
On the day of the December solstice, the sun takes its farthest pass south on the globe.
What is the shortest day of the year daylight hours?
An animation of Earth as it orbits, with points marking both equinoxes and solstices along with relevant information. Image via James O’Donoghue/ Business Insider.
What is the shortest day of the year daylight hours?
Check this out … the Breathing Earth. It’s a year of seasonal transformations on our planet, including the December solstice. John Nelson created this animation, using images from the NASA Visible Earth team. Read more about the animation via John Nelson.

What is a solstice?

The earliest people on Earth knew that the sun’s path across the sky, the length of daylight, and the location of the sunrise and sunset all shifted in a regular way throughout the year. They built monuments such as Stonehenge in England and at Machu Picchu in Peru to follow the sun’s yearly progress.

But today, we see the solstice differently. We can picture it from the vantage point of space, and we know that the solstice is an astronomical event. It’s caused by the tilt of Earth’s axis and by its orbital motion around the sun.

Earth doesn’t orbit upright. Instead, it’s tilted on its axis by 23 1/2 degrees. Through the year, this tilt causes Earth’s Northern and Southern Hemispheres trade places in receiving the sun’s light and warmth most directly. It’s this tilt, not our distance from the sun, that causes winter and summer. In fact, we’re closest to – not farthest from – the sun at the turn of every new year. But we in the Northern Hemisphere are moving into winter. That’s because the Northern Hemisphere leans farthest away from the sun for the year around this time.

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The December solstice

At the December solstice, Earth is positioned so the sun stays below the North Pole’s horizon. As seen from the latitude 23 1/2 degrees south of the equator, at the imaginary line encircling the globe known as the Tropic of Capricorn, the sun shines directly overhead at noon. This is as far south as the sun ever gets, and all locations south of the equator have day lengths greater than 12 hours.

Meanwhile, all locations north of the equator have day lengths shorter than 12 hours.

For us on the northern part of Earth, the shortest day comes at the solstice. After the winter solstice, the days will get longer, and the nights shorter.

It’s a seasonal shift that nearly everyone notices.

What is the shortest day of the year daylight hours?
Earth has seasons because our world is tilted on its axis with respect to our orbit around the sun. Image via NASA/ kudzuacres.com.

Where should I look to see signs of the December solstice in nature?

Everywhere.

For all of Earth’s creatures, nothing is so fundamental as the length of daylight. After all, the sun is the ultimate source of all light and warmth on Earth.

In the Northern Hemisphere, you’ll notice late dawns and early sunsets, the low arc of the sun across the sky each day, and how low the sun appears in the sky at local noon. Look at your noontime shadow, too. Around the time of the December solstice, it’s your longest noontime shadow of the year.

In the Southern Hemisphere, it’s opposite. Dawn comes early, dusk comes late, the sun is high, and it’s your shortest noontime shadow of the year.

What is the shortest day of the year daylight hours?
Around the time of the winter solstice, watch for late dawns, early sunsets, and the low arc of the sun across the sky each day. Notice your noontime shadow, the longest of the year. Photo via Serge Arsenie/ Flickr.
What is the shortest day of the year daylight hours?
Meanwhile, at the summer solstice, noontime shadows are short. Photo via the Slam Summer Beach Volleyball festival in Australia.

Why doesn’t the earliest sunset come on the shortest day?

The December solstice marks the shortest day of the year in the Northern Hemisphere and longest day in the Southern Hemisphere. But the earliest sunset – or earliest sunrise if you’re south of the equator – happens before the December solstice.

Instead of focusing on the time of sunset or sunrise, the key is in what is called true solar noon, which is the time of day that the sun reaches its highest point in its journey across your sky.

In early December, true solar noon comes nearly 10 minutes earlier by the clock than it does at the solstice around December 21. With true noon coming later on the solstice, so will the sunrise and sunset times.

It’s this discrepancy between clock time and sun time that causes the Northern Hemisphere’s earliest sunset and the Southern Hemisphere’s earliest sunrise to precede the December solstice.

This happens primarily because of the tilt of the Earth’s axis. A secondary but another contributing factor to this discrepancy between clock noon and sun noon comes from the Earth’s elliptical – oblong – orbit around the sun. Earth’s orbit is not a perfect circle, and the closer we are to the sun, the faster we move in our orbit.

Our closest point to the sun – or perihelion – comes in early January. So we are moving fastest in orbit around now, slightly faster than our average speed of about 19 miles per second (30 km per second). The discrepancy between sun time and clock time is greater around the December solstice than the June solstice because we’re nearer the sun at this time of year.

What is the shortest day of the year daylight hours?
Solstice sunsets, showing the sun’s position on the local horizon at December 2015 (left) and June 2016 (right) solstices from Mutare, Zimbabwe. Image via Peter Lowenstein.

Does latitude affect the earliest sunset?

Yes! The precise date of the earliest sunset depends on your latitude. At mid-northern latitudes, it comes in early December each year. At northern temperate latitudes farther north – such as in Canada and Alaska – the year’s earliest sunset comes around mid-December. Close to the Arctic Circle, the earliest sunset and the December solstice occur on or near the same day.

By the way, the latest sunrise doesn’t come on the solstice either. From mid-northern latitudes, the latest sunrise comes in early January.

The exact dates vary, but the sequence is always the same: earliest sunset in early December, shortest day on the solstice around December 22, latest sunrise in early January.

And so the cycle continues.

Bottom line: The 2022 December solstice takes place on December 21, at 21:48 UTC. It marks the Northern Hemisphere’s shortest day (first day of winter) and Southern Hemisphere’s longest day (first day of summer). Happy solstice to all!

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Deborah Byrd created the EarthSky radio series in 1991 and founded EarthSky.org in 1994. Today, she serves as Editor-in-Chief of this website. She has won a galaxy of awards from the broadcasting and science communities, including having an asteroid named 3505 Byrd in her honor. A science communicator and educator since 1976, Byrd believes in science as a force for good in the world and a vital tool for the 21st century. "Being an EarthSky editor is like hosting a big global party for cool nature-lovers," she says.