Because it cannot get away from it. Nowhere on earth can. It is an annual occurrence.
Because it is south of the equator
There are two equinoxes (i.e. vernal/spring and autumnal/fall) every year.
At the equinox day and night are of the same length all over the world because the Sun is in the plane of the Earth's equator, and that happens on March 21 and September 22 each year. At other times the Sun is above or below the Equator, and day and night have unequal lengths.
The so-called 'Harvest Moon' is the Full Moon nearest the Autumnal Equinox. There is one of them every year, in September or October in the northern Hemisphere, March or April in the southern one. Here in North America in 2012, it was Sunday, September 30.
it usually occur from september to november.
it usually occur from september to november.
September,because it is south of the equator
The "Vernal Equinox" is the beginning of "Spring" and the end of "Winter". The Autumnal Equinox is the beginning of "Autumn" or "Fall" and the end of "Summer". In the Northern Hemisphere, the Vernal Equinox is in March and the Autumnal Equinox in September each year.
the vernal equinox is always on the 21 of march. that's the day I'm righting this. _______________________________ The equinoxes occur on March 21 and September 21, plus or minus one day because of the cycle of leap years. In the northern hemisphere, the vernal equinox is in March, and the autumnal equinox is in September; in the southern hemisphere, it's reversed. In 1978, the vernal equinox in the northern hemisphere was March 20, 1978 at 5: 10 PM GMT.
liedlihqwlkhdaLDHLISHLSAD'S Equinoxes occur four times a year. The Vernal Equinox occurs in March, the Summer Solstice occurs in June, the Autumn Equinox occurs in September, and the Winter Solstice occurs in December.
The September equinox can occur at any time from the 21st to the 24th of September.
September 22
The exact time of the vernal equinox varies from year to year. This year, the March equinox (the vernal equinox in the northern hemisphere, the autumnal equinox in the southern hemisphere) will occur on March 20, 2010 at 17:32 GMT. The web page below is the "Earth's Seasons" web page from the U.S. Naval Observatory.
The Vernal Equinox is a point in the sky along the 'track' that the sun appears to follow through the stars in the course of the year. In 2010, the center of the sun reached that point at 10:30 AM PST on March 20.
March 20 (UTC) - the same date is the "vernal equinox" in the Southern Hemisphere.
There is an equinox in the spring called the vernal equinox, and one in the fall called the autumnal equinox. They happen at the moment that the center of the sun is in the earth's equatorial plane. In other words, they occur at the moments when the sun passes directly over the equator.
September 22
liedlihqwlkhdaLDHLISHLSAD'S Equinoxes occur four times a year. The Vernal Equinox occurs in March, the Summer Solstice occurs in June, the Autumn Equinox occurs in September, and the Winter Solstice occurs in December.