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Stargazers by Dennis Mammana

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Dennis Mammana

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Week of Sept. 14-20, 2008

Autumn is nearly here.

This year, the season officially begins on Sept. 22 at 8:45 a.m. PDT (11:45 a.m. EDT). Many people think that the beginning of autumn occurs when the sun rises due east and sets due west, and when the length of our day and night are equal. And, as long as we don't concern ourselves with fine details, those are both reasonably true statements.

So why, then, do we often cite the exact time for the beginning of autumn?

That's because astronomers know the beginning of autumn , the autumnal equinox, to be not actually a day, but rather a moment in time. It's marked by the sun's passage in the heavens from the Northern Hemisphere sky into the Southern Hemisphere sky; in fact, it's the moment when the sun's center crosses the celestial equator on its journey from north to south.

Confused? Well, try to imagine what's going on.

During summertime, we in the Northern Hemisphere see the sun cross our daytime sky high overhead; in our wintertime it crosses relatively low in the southern sky. This perspective comes from the fact the Earth's axis is tilted and, as we orbit the sun, our summertime sun shines more directly onto our planet's Northern Hemisphere, while the wintertime sun shines more directly onto the Southern Hemisphere.

At some point during the year, the sun — traveling along its orbit called the "ecliptic" — must cross the equator on its way southward, and that defines the moment known as the autumnal equinox.
When this occurs, our sun lies directly over the Earth's equator.

Now try to imagine standing on the Earth's equator. On the first day of autumn you'd see the sun pass directly overhead. A few days or weeks earlier, the sun would have crossed your northern sky, and a few days or weeks later it would cross your southern sky. But on that day, the sun stands directly over the equator so you would watch it pass directly overhead.

Another way of thinking about it is to visualize a projection of the Earth's equator into the starry heavens. This would create in the sky what astronomers call the "celestial equator." The moment the sun crosses this great circle on its way south marks the autumnal equinox, and the onset of autumn in the Earth's Northern Hemisphere.

To find out more about Dennis Mammana and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

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Originally Published on Thursday September 04, 2008

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