Saturday, February 29, 2020

Daylight Saving Time and the Vernal Equinox

Every March we have two annual observations that are not holidays—one is man made and the other is science/nature. The first is the start of daylight saving time and the other is the beginning of Spring.

In the U.S., at 2am on the second Sunday in March we set our clocks forward one hour for the start of daylight saving time—or to put it another way, we lose one hour of sleep. This year, the second Sunday falls on March 8, 2020. And on the first Sunday in November at 2am we reverse that process by setting our clocks back one hour—we get an additional hour of sleep to make up for that hour we lost in March. In 2020, that first Sunday is November 1st.

Standard time—the creation of time zones—was instituted in the U.S. and Canada by the railroads in 1883. Due to the vast width of the two countries stretching thousands of miles from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean, it was necessary to establish some method of standardizing train schedules. However, it was not established in U.S. law until the Act of March 19, 1918. The Act also established daylight saving time which was repealed in 1919 while standard time in time zones remained the law. Daylight saving time was re-established in World War II. The Uniform Time Act of 1966 brought standardization of start and stop dates but allowed for local exemptions from its observance. Since then, the official beginning and ending dates have changed several times, the most recent being in 2007. There are many wondering why we continue to bother with daylight saving vs. standard time as that annual change seems to have no purpose in today's society. Several states are currently considering doing away with it.

Those states that have previously opted for the exemption from daylight saving time are Arizona (except for the Navajo, who do observe daylight saving time on tribal lands), Hawaii, and the overseas territories of American Samoa, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and the United States Virgin Islands.

There are several states that are split between two time zones. Oregon and Idaho are split between the Mountain and Pacific time zones. Florida, Michigan, Indiana (I think I read somewhere that one of Indiana's time zones observes daylight saving time and the other time zone does not), Kentucky, and Tennessee are split between Eastern and Central time zones. Nebraska, Kansas, Texas, North and South Dakota are divided between Central and Mountain time zones.

At one time, Alaska covered four time zones. That has been changed and Alaska is now in two time zones. More than 98 percent of the state's population are in one of these zones, now called Yukon time, which is one hour earlier than Pacific standard time and four hours earlier than Eastern standard time.
And then there is the other annual observance, the one dictated by science/nature—the vernal equinox.

Equinox translates literally to "equal night."

This year, on Thursday, March 19, 2020, at precisely 11:50pm eastern daylight time, the sun crosses directly over the Earth's equator. The fact that it's night time in the U.S. and Canada does not change anything. That moment is known as the vernal equinox in the Northern Hemisphere announcing the arrival of spring and the autumnal equinox in the Southern Hemisphere announcing the arrival of fall. A second equinox will occur in September. According to the Farmer's Almanac, this is the earliest first day of spring in the last 124 years.

The fact that the Earth has distinctive seasons is due to the 23.4 degree tilt of the Earth's axis. The Earth receives more sunlight (longer daylight hours) in the summer and less sunlight (fewer daylight hours) in the winter.  The tilt of the axis makes the seasons opposite in the Northern and Southern Hemisphere. At the north pole summer gives six months of daylight while at the same time the south pole is experiencing six months of darkness. The closer you are to the equator, the number of hours of daylight and darkness become more equal.
The fall and spring equinoxes are the only two times during the year when the sun rises due east and sets due west. Modern astronomy aside, people have recognized the astronomical connection to the season changes for thousands of years. The ancients of various civilizations all over the world built structures that illustrate this—temples dedicated to their various gods that modern man recognizes as observatories. Not only the spring and fall equinox days, but also the summer and winter solstice days (most and least daily hours of sunlight).

I think it's also interesting to note a connection between the spring equinox and Groundhog Day (another holiday derived from the practices and celebrations of the ancients). If the groundhog sees his shadow on February 2, we have six more weeks of winter. And by "coincidence" that six weeks takes us to the spring equinox.
A little bit of equinox trivia: According to folklore, you can stand a raw egg on its end on the equinox. One spring, a few minutes before the vernal equinox, twenty-four almanac editors tested the theory. For a full work day, seventeen out of twenty-four eggs stood up on the large end. Then three days following the equinox, they tried the same test again. And guess what? The results were similar.  Perhaps the second test was still too close to the equinox?  :)

And there you have it—your science lesson for the day.

8 comments:

Hywela Lyn said...

Thanks for a really interesting post, Shauna. As a UK citizen, I really wish they'd just leave the time alone! (We're usually a week after the US in changing the clocks and i feel the winter evenings are long enough without changing the time! :))

Melody DeBlois said...

This was an interesting post. I live in Arizona for six months and California for the rest of the year. I love that Arizona doesn't practice daylight savings time. I wish California would quit messing with the clock. It makes life easier when the time stays the same all through the year.

GiniRifkin said...

Thank you for the great post. Although the Equinox is a scientific phenomenon it has such a magical feel to it as well. Happy Spring. Happy Ostera.

Margaret Carter said...

Fascinating. We lived for over three years in Hawaii, and it's obvious why they don't change the time twice a year (same with the other tropical areas): The length of the day doesn't vary much from season to season anyhow, because of the proximity to the equator, as you mentioned. I don't know why Arizona doesn't; we never lived there. (Not many naval bases in that state. ) I would be delighted if we stayed on Daylight Saving Time all year around. Who really wants it to start getting dark before 5 p.m. in the middle of winter? Not I! Depressing. Some parents complain about darkness in the morning before school in the winter months. But at that hour we're moving INTO light, not into deeper darkness. IMO, it's worse for kids with after-school activities to be coming home in dusk or dark, as with the current winter schedule.

Shawna Delacorte said...

Hywela: I agree on just leaving the time alone and stop changing it.

Thanks for your comment.

Shawna Delacorte said...

Melody: It's definitely confusing when California changes time, Arizona does not, yet the Native American reservations in Arizona do change time. Some times you don't know whether you're coming or going. :)

Thanks for your comment.

Shawna Delacorte said...

Gini: I like spring...everything fresh and new, the renewal of life.

Thanks for your comment.

Shawna Delacorte said...

Margaret: I don't like changing between daylight saving and standard. I wish they would just pick one or the other and leave it that way all year.

Thanks for your comment.