Nowhere.
The closest place is on the equator.
Nowhere on earth.
The term for when the sun is directly overhead at noon at the equator is called the equinoxes. This occurs around March 21st and September 23rd each year.
I think that the sun is only ever directly overhead the equator at noon on any day of the year.
highest during the day is noon. highest during the year is the summer solstice - June 21st It is called Solar Noon.
The noon sun is directly overhead in New York State at solar noon during the summer solstice, which occurs around June 21 each year. However, due to New York's latitude (approximately 40 to 45 degrees North), the sun never reaches a point directly overhead at any time during the year. Instead, the sun's highest point in the sky occurs at an angle, with the closest approach to being overhead occurring in the southern parts of the state during the summer months.
Amritsar, located in Punjab, does not experience the noon sun directly overhead due to its northern latitude, which is around 31.6 degrees north. The sun is directly overhead at the Tropic of Cancer (23.5 degrees north) during the summer solstice, but as one moves northward, the sun's zenith position shifts southward. As a result, in Amritsar, the sun is at an angle during noon, making it impossible for the sun to be directly overhead at any time of the year.
The sun can never be directly overhead anywhere in New York state ... or anywhere in the USA for that matter. The highest it can ever appear is at noon on June 21. But in order to ever see it directly overhead, you have to be located within 23.5 degrees of the equator.
Yes, a person living at the equator will see the Sun directly overhead at noon on two specific days of the year during the equinoxes (around March 21 and September 23). This phenomenon occurs due to the Earth's axial tilt and the Sun's position relative to the equator.
The sun is directly overhead at the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn during the solstices, which occur twice a year - around June 21 and December 21. This results in the longest and shortest days of the year in the respective hemispheres.
Sure. At the time the sun reaches the Autumnal Equinox, around September 22 or 23 each year, when the sun crosses the equator, then wherever on the equator it happens to be noon at that moment, the sun is directly overhead there. Also, don't forget about the 22 or 23 September days before that, when the sun is slightly north of the equator, plus the 7 or 8 September days after that, when the sun is slightly south of the equator. There are bunches of places within those latitudes that will have noon-sun overhead, once during the month.
The sun is directly overhead in Fort Worth, Texas, during the summer solstice, which occurs around June 21 each year. However, it is never exactly overhead at Fort Worth's latitude, as it is located at approximately 32.75 degrees north. The sun reaches its highest point in the sky around noon during this time, but it will not be directly overhead.
The Sun is never directly overhead at noon for an observer at locations above the Tropic of Cancer (23.5 degrees north latitude) or below the Tropic of Capricorn (23.5 degrees south latitude). This is because the Sun is directly overhead at noon at least once a year along the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn as a result of Earth's axial tilt.