Fall officially begins in the Northern Hemisphere on Sept. 23 with the autumnal equinox as the entire world experiences equal hours of daylight and darkness.
For ease of recordkeeping, meteorologists and climatologists consider Sept. 1 the first day of autumn, but astronomically speaking, the Earth’s equator is aligned directly with the Sun on the autumnal equinox. In 2023, that occurs Sept. 23 at 2:50 a.m. EDT and marks the start of the season.
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Astronomical seasons are based on the position of the Earth with respect to the Sun as the planet makes its annual revolution around this closest star. So fall usually starts on Sept. 22 or 23 but can be the 21 and 24 as well, rarely, though.
The Earth is tilted approximately 23.5 degrees off a vertical axis, and because of this tilt, the most direct sunlight is aimed at the Northern Hemisphere during our astronomical summer and at the Southern Hemisphere during our astronomical winter.
Astronomical summer in the Northern Hemisphere spanned June 21 to September 23 this year. That was astronomical winter in the Southern Hemisphere.
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The two solstices and two equinoxes are simply precise moments in time when the Sun is in direct alignment with three distinct bands of latitude.
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Their dates can vary by a day or two each year since it takes the Earth 365 days and 6 hours (365.25 days) to make one full revolution around the sun, which is why we have a leap year every four years.
On the summer solstice in June, the sun’s most direct rays are positioned over the Tropic of Cancer (23.5 degrees north latitude), while on December’s winter solstice, the most direct rays of sunlight are in alignment with the Tropic of Capricorn (23.5 degrees south latitude).
On the autumnal equinox in September and the vernal (spring) equinox in March, the equator (0 degrees latitude) is aligned directly with the sun. Therefore, everywhere on Earth experiences an equal 12 hours of day and night because the sun rises due east and sets due west.
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In the summer, the sun rises in the northeastern sky and sets in the northwestern sky, providing long days and short nights. The sun reaches its highest and northernmost point in the sky at solar noon (around 1 p.m. local time due to daylight saving time) on the summer solstice. This provides the most direct solar radiation of the year, resulting in more heating of the Earth’s surface and, therefore, warmer temperatures.
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In the winter, the sunrise is in the southeastern sky, and the sunset is in the southwestern sky – a much shorter path across the Northern Hemisphere’s sky – so days are short and nights are long. The solar-noon sun angle is the lowest and farthest south in the sky on the winter solstice. This means we receive the least direct solar radiation of the year on the first day of winter, resulting in colder temperatures because there’s less heating of the Earth’s surface.
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Interestingly, the Earth’s orbit around the sun is elliptical (not perfectly circular), so it’s actually closest to the sun in January (perihelion) during the Northern Hemisphere’s winter and farthest from the sun in July (aphelion) during the Northern Hemisphere’s summer.