add the amount of sunlight, divide by 2, add to the sunrise.
Your answer is there
local noon (not noon according to the clock)
local noon (not noon according to the clock)
overhead
Local noon
Noon, because the sun is directly overhead.
No, because of the difference between their longitudes, mean local noon at Buffalo (12:16 PM EST) is about 20½ minutes after mean local noon at Albany (11:55 AM EST).
Local apparent noon occurs at 12:13:36 local time at 123 degrees, 24 minutes W.
11:37 if my math is correct :)
The opposite of midnight is midday, or noon(local).
That's the definition of local noon, everywhere. In "standard" time zones, near the middle.
The shadow cast in sunshine is shortest when the sun is at its highest, that is, at local noon. In general, that is not civil clock time noon. Several websites can tell you your local noon. Try the United States Naval Observatory, for example: www.usno.navy.mil
Solar noon is the time when the Sun appears to contact the local celestial meridian. This is when the Sun apparently reaches its highest point in the sky, at 12 noon apparent solar time and can be observed using a sundial. The local or clock time of solar noon depends on the longitude and date.