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March equinox 2023 brings spring to the Northern Hemisphere with a not-so-equal timing twist
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March equinox 2023 brings spring to the Northern Hemisphere with a not-so-equal timing twist

On March 20 at 5:24 p.m. EDT (2:24 p.m. PDT) the spring (or vernal) equinox occurs as the sun's rays shine directly down on the equator.

Science & Tech

It's time to say goodbye to winter - at least in the Northern Hemisphere.

On Monday (March 20) at 5:24 p.m. EDT (2:24 p.m. PDT) the spring (or vernal) equinox occurs. At that moment, the sun comes to one of two places where its rays shine directly down on the equator. It will then be shining equally on both halves of the Earth.

More precisely at that moment, the sun will be shining directly down on the equator at a point over the Pacific Ocean, roughly 1,900 miles (3,100 km) southeast of the Hawaiian Islands.

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When most of us were growing up, it always seemed that the first day of spring was on March 21, not March 20. But now for North Americans, spring begins on March 20. In fact, during the 20th century, March 21 was actually the exception rather than the rule, with the equinox landing on that day only 36 times. From the years 1980 through 2102, it comes no later than March 20.

Next year in fact, spring will officially begin on March 19. This shift in dates happens because the Earth's elliptical orbit changes the orientation of its axis, and because our year does not contain an even number of days. The vagaries of our Gregorian calendar, such as the inclusion of a leap day in century years divisible by 400 also help contribute to the seasonal date shift. Had the year 2000 not been a leap year, the equinox would be occurring this year on Tuesday (March 21), not Monday.

Not "equal" on the equinox!

Another complexity involving the vernal equinox concerns the axiom, "equal days and equal nights on the equinox." Yet each year I always get at least one or two inquiries asking why that isn't so. Perhaps someone skimming through the weather page of their newspaper on the day of the equinox, looked at the almanac box which provides the local time of sunrise and sunset and noticed that the length of day and night is not equal at all. In fact, on the equinox dates in both March and September, the length of daylight is actually longer than darkness by several minutes.

Check out the situation for New York City. As the table below shows, days and nights are equal not on the equinox, but on Saint Patrick's Day:

https://www.space.com/equinox-march-2023-not-so-equal