i dont know it is not anywhere to be found i love pb
At noontime in the central US on a sunny day, a person's shadow lies directly below them due to the position of the sun being almost directly overhead. This is because the sun is at its highest point in the sky around noon, resulting in shorter or no shadows.
As the summer solstice approaches, noontime shadows in New York State become shorter due to the sun's higher position in the sky. Around this time, the sun reaches its zenith at noon, resulting in more direct sunlight and diminished shadow length. This change is particularly noticeable as the longest day of the year approaches, leading to a shift in the angle and intensity of sunlight. Consequently, objects cast shorter and more defined shadows during the midday hours.
That would be the day that the noontime sun is lowest in the sky.At any point north of 23.5 degrees north latitude, that's the day of the Winter solstice,around December 21, and that range of latitudes takes in every point in the USA.
john
It is called sext.
Goodtime or bad time.
it is like a snack but bigger
Shadows are longer when the Sun is low in the sky, and are longest at sunrise and sunset. The shortest shadows are seen at "Local Apparent Noon", when the Sun is high in the sky. Over the course of a year, noontime shadows are longest on the winter solstice and shortest on the summer solstice. In the northern hemisphere, the winter solstice is on December 21; the summer solstice is on June 21. Switch these dates for the southern hemisphere, and these dates may vary a day either way depending on the cycle of leap years.
It will be lower in the sky. As the midpoint of winter passes, the noontime sun will be higher each day until midsummer.
Eat bulaga!
sunnburn!
direction of sunlight? Straight down, at you.