
A typical sunrise, in New Zealand

A GIF video of the rising sun

Orbital sunrise from Shuttle Endeavour.

The
terminator in April. As the terminator moves westward across the globe, sunrise occurs to the northeast, and sunset to the northwest, except for a thin region near the poles that do not experience sunrise/sunset at all (
midnight sun,
polar night).
'Sunrise' is the
time at which the first part of the
Sun appears above the
horizon in the
east. Sunrise should not be confused with
dawn, which is the (variously defined) point at which the
sky begins to lighten, some time before the sun itself appears, ending
twilight. Because
atmospheric refraction causes the sun to be seen while it is still below the horizon, both sunrise and sunset are, from one point of view,
optical illusions. The sun also appears larger on the horizon, but this is another optical illusion, similar to the
moon illusion.
The apparent
westward revolution of Sun around the
earth after rising out of the horizon is due to the Earth's eastward rotation. This illusion is so convincing that most cultures had mythologies and religions built around the
geocentric model. This same effect can be seen with near-
polar satellites as well.
As sunrise and
sunset are calculated from the leading and trailing edges of the Sun, and not the center; this slightly increases the duration of "
day" relative to "
night." The
sunrise equation, however, is based on the center of the
sun.
In the
Northern Hemisphere, the latest sunrise does not occur on the
winter solstice around
December 21, but rather in early January. Likewise, the earliest sunrise is not on the
summer solstice around
June 21, but occurs earlier in June in the Northern Hemisphere. As one travels further from the equator, the times of sunrise and sunset change throughout the year. Even on the
equator, sunrise and sunset shift several minutes back and forth through the year, along with
solar noon. These effect are plotted using an
analemma.
Due to Earth's axial tilt, whenever and wherever sunrise occurs, it is always in the northeast quadrant from the March equinox to the September equinox and in the southeast quadrant from the September equinox to the March equinox.
The
colors of the sky, throughout the day and at sunrise and sunset, are explained by the phenomena of both
Rayleigh Scattering and
Mie Scattering. The
red hues of the sky at sunset and sunrise are caused by Mie Scattering, not Rayleigh Scattering. The hues of
blue,
violet, and
green in the sky are due to Rayleigh Scattering. Rayleigh Scattering is scattering of shorter
wavelength light, (e.g. blue & violet), by
air atoms and
molecules, (not statistical variations in
density of the
Earth's atmosphere). The magnitude or strength of Rayleigh Scattering varies by the
reciprocal of the wavelength raised to the fourth
power, and hence, does not explain the
beautiful variations of reds,
purples,
oranges, and
peachy colors. The latter colors arise from Mie Scattering, low
angle scattering of light off of
dust,
soot,
smoke, and
ash particles. Mie Scattering, (producing the colors of sunset and sunrise), is beautifully recognizable down-
wind of and after dust
storms,
forest fires, and
volcanic eruptions that inject large quantities of fine particulate matter into the
atmosphere. A number of eruptions in recent times, such as those of
Mount Pinatubo in 1991 and
Krakatoa in 1883, have been sufficiently large to produce remarkable sunsets and sunrises all over the
world. Sometimes just before sunrise or after sunset a
green flash can be seen.
Gallery
See also
★
Sunrise equation
★
Sunset
★
Twilight
★
Sunsight
★
Day
★
Daybreak
★
Day length
External links
★
Sunrise and sunset calculator
★
Customized Sunset, Sunrise Calculator calendar
★
Sun or Moon Rise/Set Table for one Year
★
US Navy Sunrise and Sunset calculator
★
Full physical explanation of sky color, in simple terms
★
An Excel workbook with VBA functions for sunrise, sunset, solar noon, twilight (dawn and dusk), and solar position (azimuth and elevation); by
Greg Pelletier, translated from NOAA's online calculators for
solar position and
sunrise/sunset
★
sun.exnatura.org Online sunrise/-set calendar with interactive location finder
★
Formulas to calculate sunrise and sunset
★
Provides sunrise/sunset times for location specified by Google Maps
★
Daily almanac including Sun rise/set/twillight for every location on Earth
★
Monthly calendar with Sun/Moon rise/set times for every location on Earth