11:37 if my math is correct :)
At mid-day or when the sun is as close to overhead of you as possible. At this time, your shadow will be directly below you and not long, as it is at sunrise or sunset. If you want which day in a year the Shadow likely to be smallest than it is June 22
Somewhere in the northern hemisphere...
sunset comes first and then noon.
The duration of Black Noon is 1.23 hours.
On the Summer Solstice, June 21, the Sun is at about 23.5 degrees north. If you are at 50 degrees north, then at noon ("Local Apparent Noon", when the Sun reaches its highest point in the sky) on June 21, the Sun will be at an altitude of 66.5 degrees above the southern horizon.
local noon (not noon according to the clock)
The star w´ll cross first by about 3 minutes 56 seconds.
No. Today, the scientists still don't know the answer for that question. It's been a mystery for all of us for many, many years. Only, heavenly Father might know the answer.
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.
That's the definition of local noon, everywhere. In "standard" time zones, near the middle.
The opposite of midnight is midday, or noon(local).
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