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Happy New Spring and Happy New Year!

Diagram of astronomical refraction

This weekend we’re all experiencing the first hours of spring 2021.

Spring precisely began early this Saturday morning at 5:47 a.m., more formally known as the Vernal Equinox.

This weekend the entire globe receives equal intensities of energy from the sun. Since last Dec. 21, the sun has been climbing higher and higher in the sky, and daylight hours are increasing. This trend will continue until June 20, the first day of summer.

As much as I like longer days, it’s rough on stargazing! It doesn’t get dark enough until very late in the evening. I find myself taking in a little more caffeine the morning after spring star parties.

This season is called spring because of green grass, plants and flowers springing out.

If George Washington or Ben Franklin were still with us, they would also wish you a Happy New Year! Back in the day of our nation’s founders, New Year’s Day coincided with the first day of spring. In fact, up until 1752, the start of spring was also officially New Years’ Day in both England and the American Colonies. Back when George Washington had his New Year’s bashes, the flowers were beginning to bloom in his backyard.

Back in colonial times the first day of spring was celebrated on March 25. England and the colonies were still operating under an old calendar with roots that dated back to Babylonian times. Most of the western world, especially the Roman Catholic countries, switched over to the Gregorian calendar in the late 1500s. That calendar had Jan. 1 as the first day of the year.

The Gregorian calendar was actually a correction of the Julian calendar that went back to 46 BC in the time of the ancient Greeks. England finally decided in 1752 that it was time to be in sync with the rest of the western world and adopted the Gregorian calendar. Up until then, English royalty were far too arrogant to adapt with every else. You undoubtedly didn’t want to push them too hard, that is, if you valued your life!

Having New Year’s Day on the first day of spring makes sense when you think about it. New life, a fresh start, and the promise of many lovely days to come. So what does all this calendar stuff have to do with stargazing? Not a heck of a lot, but I thought you’d find it interesting, and I wanted to get your attention with the headline.

Many of us have been taught that we have equal daytime and nighttime hours, 12 hours each on the first day of spring. That’s just not true! If you check the almanac for this Saturday, the first day of spring, sunrise officially in Butler is at 7:22 a.m. and sunset is at 7:32 p.m. We already have ten more minutes of daytime than nighttime. What’s going on here? How does this happen?

Earth’s atmosphere shell is responsible. When the sun is seen near the horizon, its light has to travel through a much thicker layer of air than it does when it’s higher up in the sky. The thicker atmosphere near the horizon bends light so severely that objects seem higher in the sky than they actually are.

As crazy as this sounds, the sun may actually be physically just below the horizon, but it will appear above the horizon because of the bending of its light. This is called astronomical refraction.

So when are days and nights equal? The answer is St. Patrick’s Day. Maybe the sun does shine on the Irish!

Despite having turned the astronomical page to spring, there are still many great winter constellations like Orion and others to enjoy. I’ll have more on that in next week’s Starwatch column.

Mike Lynch is an amateur astronomer and retired broadcast meteorologist for WCCO Radio in Minneapolis/St. Paul. He is the author of “Stars: a Month by Month Tour of the Constellations,” published by Adventure Publications and available at bookstores and adventurepublications.net. Contact him at mikewlynch@comcast.net.

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