Information AboutTwilight |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT TWILIGHT | |
| earth phenomena | |
| parts of a day | |
| night | |
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- Lapland at midnight in July]] Twilight is the time before Sunrise or after Sunset when Sunlight Scattered in the upper Atmosphere illuminates the lower atmosphere and the surface of the Earth is between light and dark. DEFINITIONS The following guidelines have been established and widely accepted:
(For these definitions, an Ideal Horizon 90° from the Zenith is used. The above-mentioned altitudes of the sun below the horizon are "true geometric" altitudes, that is, Refraction by the atmosphere and other small factors influencing the observed position of the Sun are ''not'' to be accounted for.) Within the Polar Circle s, 24-hour Daylight is encountered in Summer , and twilight literally lasts for weeks (in the polar fall and spring). In high Latitude s outside the polar circles, 24-hour daylight is not seen, but twilight can extend from sunset to sunrise, a phenomenon often referred to as ' White Night s'. Above roughly 60.5°N or S (e.g. Anchorage , Helsinki , Tallinn , Saint Petersburg and Oslo ), civil twilight lasts all night at midsummer, while above about 54.5°N or S (e.g. Copenhagen , Moscow , Gdańsk , Glasgow , Belfast , Vilnius , Szczecin and Hamburg ), nautical twilight lasts all night at midsummer. Astronomical twilight can last all night for several weeks as far from the poles as 48.5°N or S (e.g. London , Vancouver , Kraków , Prague and Frankfurt ). The length of twilight after sunset and before sunrise is heavily influenced by the Latitude of the observer; in the Arctic and Antarctic regions, twilight (if at all) can last for several hours (with none at the poles within a month on either side of the winter solstice), while at the Equator , it can go from day to night in as little as 20 minutes. This is because at low latitudes the earth's movement is perpendicular to the observer's horizon. Thus a location on the equator will pass through the various twilight zones directly and quickly. As one gets closer to the Arctic and Antarctic circles, the earth's surface moves toward the observer's horizon from a lower angle. The observer's earthly location will pass through the various twilight zones less directly, taking more time. At temperate-zone latitudes, twilight is shortest at or near both equinoxes, slightly longer around the time of the winter solstice, and much longer in late spring and early summer. The Collateral Adjective of "twilight" is Crepuscular (for daylight it is "diurnal" and for night, "nocturnal"). The most frequently-encountered use of the term is to apply it to certain species of Insect s and Mammal s that are most active during that time. ON OTHER PLANETS Twilight on Mars is longer than on Earth, lasting for up to two hours before sunrise or after sunset. Dust high in the atmosphere scatters light to the night side of the planet. Similar twilights are seen on Earth following major volcanic eruptions.NASA-Jet Propulsion Laboratory: Winter Solstice on Mars: Rovers Look Forward to A Second Martian Spring , August 7, 2006 SIGNIFICANCE The immediate onset of morning nautical twilight is probably closest to the time at which Muslim s are supposed to make the morning prayer as well as begin their fast, although many consider astronomical twilight to be closerAl-Fajr As-Sadiq: A New Perspective: {Link without Title} , August 2, 2007Fajr_Isha_Observations.doc: {Link without Title} . More precisely, the proper time is just after the diffusion of '' and '' Maghrib '' for the daily prayers performed during dawn and dusk. Jew s begin holidays and major fasts, such as Yom Kippur , at sunset; they end them at twilight the following day. Jews begin and end minor fast days at morning and evening twilight. SEE ALSO REFERENCES EXTERNAL LINKS
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