June 20th, 2016 marks the official beginning of summer in the northern hemisphere. We call this day the summer solstice.
In astronomical terms, the summer solstice for the northern hemisphere occurs when the sun is the farthest north of the equator on the ecliptic. This angular distance is 23.5°, This angle also marks a line of latitude on the Earth called the Tropic of Cancer.
The Tropic of Cancer is so called because the summer solstice used to occur when the Sun was in the constellation Cancer and the latitude lines in the tropical zone. There is also a comparable line of latitude south of the equator called the Antarctic Circle. The latitude is 66.5° South and for anyone living south of this latitude (really, mostly penguins or anyone stationed in Antarctica), the Sun will never rise. Conversely, the Arctic Circle at 66.5° North, the Sun never sets. In fact, from the vernal equinox to the autumnal equinox, the North Pole is in perpetual sunlight, while the South Pole is in perpetual darkness.
The summer solstice marks the day of the year when the northern hemisphere receives the most light. From here on until the winter solstice, the days will only get shorter and the nights longer. In the southern hemisphere, the opposite occurs. Today marks the shortest day of the year and they are in winter time.
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