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Each planet revolves
around the Sun in an
elliptical path, with the
Sun occupying one
of the foci of the ellipse.
-- Kepler's
1st Law of Planetary Motion
June 30, 2000 -- On the 4th of July, Earth will be
at its greatest distance from the Sun in the year 2000. But don't
expect any sudden relief from the heat. Northern summer will
be as warm as ever despite our arrival at a distant part of Earth's
orbit that astronomers call "aphelion."
"Earth moves in an elliptical orbit," says George Lebo,
an astronomer at the NASA Marshall Space Flight Center. "We
make our closest approach to the Sun (147.5 million km) in January
-- that's called perihelion. We're at the greatest distance
(152.6 million km), or aphelion, in July. This year aphelion
falls on Independence Day holiday in the U.S."
Above: After sunset on the 4th of July, a slender crescent
moon seen low in the western sky will serve as a delicate celestial
backdrop for Independence Day fireworks in the U.S.A. Although
the Earth will be at its greatest distance from the Sun on July
4th, northern summer will be as warm as ever. Appropriate attire
for watching fireworks still includes shorts and a t-shirt. Image
credit: Duane Hilton.
A common misconception is that Earth's
varying distance from the Sun causes the four seasons. In fact,
the 23.5-degree tilt of our planet's spin axis is more important.
The tilt of the north pole toward the Sun in June causes summer
north of the equator, while summer south of the equator comes
six months later when the south pole is facing the Sun. The ellipticity
of Earth's orbit does cause a small change in solar heating from
July (aphelion) to January (perihelion), but it's not the dominant
factor in shaping seasonal weather patterns.
"Sunlight falling on Earth is about 7% less intense in
July than it is at our closest approach to the Sun in January,"
says Roy Spencer of the Global Hydrology and Climate Center.
You might expect northern summer to be cooler because it occurs
when Earth is farther from the Sun. Not so, explains Spencer.
"The oceans and land on Earth are not evenly distributed
around the globe. The northern hemisphere has more land; the
southern hemisphere has more water. This tends to moderate the
impact of differences in sunlight between perihelion and aphelion."
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Editor's Note: Do you have trouble
remembering the difference between perihelion and aphelion? An
old astronomer's trick is to recall that the words "away"
and "aphelion" both begin with the letter "A". |
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At aphelion the land-crowded northern half of our planet
is tilted toward the Sun. For a given amount of sunlight, land
warms up more than water (in other words, land has a lower heat
capacity). Sunlight is therefore more effective at raising
the temperature
of the northern hemisphere. This results in the surprising
fact that northern summer is a little warmer than southern summer
even though Earth is farther from the Sun in July.
On planets like Mars with orbits much more eccentric than ours,
the varying distance to the Sun can have a big influence on seasonal
conditions. For example, northern summer on Mars lasts 24 days
longer than winter because the planet is close to aphelion when
the north pole is tilted toward the Sun. Planets move more slowly
at aphelion than they do at perihelion (see Kepler's
2nd Law of planetary motion) and, so, seasons occurring near
aphelion last longer. During the long martian summer, so much
CO2 frost at the north pole sublimes into gaseous form that the
global pressure of Mars' atmosphere increases by up to 30%.
Imagine leaving for a lunchtime picnic on the 4th of July
only to arrive at the park and discover the humid summer air
to be one-third denser than normal! This won't happen on Earth
because our orbit is more nearly circular than the Red Planet's.
Earth has one of the most circular orbits in the solar system.
Only Neptune and Venus follow more perfectly circular paths around
the Sun. The other six planets trace paths that are significantly
elliptical. Pluto, the planet with the greatest orbital eccentricity,
follows a path so lopsided that it sometimes travels closer to
the Sun than Neptune. Just last year Pluto ended a 20-year stint
as the eighth planet when it
crossed Neptune's orbit in February on its way back to the
outer solar system.
After
Pluto, the second and third most elliptical orbits belong to
Mercury and Mars, respectively. As this diagram illustrates,
their paths around the Sun (solid lines) depart significantly
from that of a circle (dotted lines). Future astronauts visiting
Mars or Mercury would notice that the apparent size of the Sun
varies a great deal throughout the year. On Mars, for example,
the aphelion Sun is 0.30 degrees across. At perihelion it would
grow to 0.36 degrees in diameter, an increase of 20%.
Right: The orbits of Mercury (red), Earth (blue) and
Mars (black). The solid lines indicate each planet's elliptical
path around the Sun. The dotted lines show circular paths with
the same mean separation from the center. Earth is almost exactly
the same distance from the Sun at aphelion and perihelion, but
the orbits of Mars and Mercury depart significantly from a circle.
For more information, please visit Bridgewater College's Interactive
Planetary Orbits web site.
The high eccentricity of Mercury's orbit, coupled with its peculiar
rotation (it rotates on its axis 3 times for every 2 circuits
around the Sun), would produce very strange effects for an observer
there. At some longitudes the Sun would rise and then gradually
increase in apparent size as it slowly moved toward the zenith.
At that point the Sun would stop, briefly reverse course, and
stop again before resuming its path toward the horizon, decreasing
in size as it set. All the while the stars would be moving three
times faster across the sky. At the instant of perihelion, the
Mercurian Sun would appear to be 1.6 degrees wide. At aphelion,
the solar disk would shrink to 1.1 degrees, about twice as large
as the half-degree solar diameter that we see from Earth.
The annual size of the Sun changes most on Pluto. An
observer there might not notice the difference, however, because
the Sun always seems so small from a vantage point in the outer
solar system. The maximum size of the solar disk from Pluto is
a mere 1 arcminute across, or 30 times smaller than the Sun we
see from Earth. The human eye can't distinguish objects separated
by angles less than about 50 arcseconds (0.8 arcminutes), so
even at perihelion, the Sun would appear as a starlike point
to a human observer on that icy world.
Back on Earth, if you plan to spend the 4th of July holiday outdoors,
don't bother staring at the Sun to see if it looks any smaller.
The blindingly bright solar disk will subtend an angle that is
1.7% less than average but you won't be able to discern the difference
with the naked eye. Instead, keep an eye on the western sky just
after sunset. A delicate waxing crescent Moon will grace the
horizon and possibly serve as the spectacular backdrop for Independence
Day fireworks.
Planetary
Orbits
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Planet |
Eccentricity |
Perihelion Distance
closest point to the Sun
(AU) |
Aphelion Distance
farthest point from the Sun
(AU) |
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Notes: 1 AU, the average distance from the Earth to
the Sun, equals 93 million miles or 150 million kilometers. The
eccentricity of a planet's orbit measures how much it departs
from a perfect circle. Orbits with zero eccentricity (e =
0) are circular; orbits with eccentricities close to 1 (e
~ 1) are long and skinny. Planetary orbits tend to be almost
circular while comets and many asteroids follow more eccentric
paths. |
The Global Hydrology and Climate Center is a joint venture
between government and academia to study the global water cycle
and its effect on Earth's climate. Jointly funded by NASA and
its academic partners, and jointly operated by NASA's Marshall
Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., and the University of
Alabama in Huntsville, the Center conducts research in a number
of critical areas. |