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  2. Lighting-up time - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lighting-up_time

    Lighting-up time, sunrise/sunset and twilights at the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, United Kingdom; Lighting-up time at the Royal Observatory Edinburgh; D. O'Leary, When to light up: a pocket treatise on the Lights on vehicles act, 1907 containing a full explanation of the act, with a table showing the lighting-up time Published 1908

  3. March equinox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/March_equinox

    This had the effect of adding about three quarters of an hour every four years. The effect accumulated from inception in 45 BC until the 16th century, when the northern vernal equinox fell on 10 or 11 March. [16] The date in 1452 was 11 March, 11:52 (Julian). [17] In 2547 it will be 20 March, 21:18 (Gregorian) and 3 March, 21:18 (Julian). [18]

  4. Equinox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equinox

    The times of sunset and sunrise vary with the observer's location (longitude and latitude), so the dates when day and night are equal also depend upon the observer's location. A third correction for the visual observation of a sunrise (or sunset) is the angle between the apparent horizon as seen by an observer and the geometric (or sensible ...

  5. Twilight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twilight

    An Excel workbook with VBA functions for twilight (dawn and dusk), sunrise, solar noon, sunset, and solar position (azimuth and elevation) by Greg Pelletier, translated from NOAA's online calculator for sunrise/sunset; Time and Date to find the current state of the sun in a specified place. "Twilight" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 27 (11th ...

  6. Sunrise equation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunrise_equation

    The times of the rising and the setting of the upper solar limb as given in astronomical almanacs correct for this by using the more general equation cos ⁡ ω ∘ = sin ⁡ a − sin ⁡ ϕ × sin ⁡ δ cos ⁡ ϕ × cos ⁡ δ {\displaystyle \cos \omega _{\circ }={\dfrac {\sin a-\sin \phi \times \sin \delta }{\cos \phi \times \cos \delta }}}

  7. Sunset - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunset

    Calculate the sunset time, which is the solar noon time plus the sunset hour angle in degree divided by 15; Use the sunset time as input to the solar geometry routine to get the solar azimuth angle at sunset. An interesting feature in the figure on the right is apparent hemispheric symmetry in regions where daily sunrise and sunset actually occur.

  8. List of dates for Easter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_dates_for_Easter

    In 1818 the Paschal Full Moon fell on Saturday, March 21 (the equinox). Therefore, the following day, March 22 and the 81st day of the year, was Easter. It will not fall as early again until 2285, a span of 467 years. The next earliest Easter, March 23, in that timespan occurred in 1845, 1856, 1913, and 2008. Easter will next occur on March 23 ...

  9. Calendar (New Style) Act 1750 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calendar_(New_Style)_Act_1750

    In his book Hogarth, His Life, Art and Times (1993), Ronald Paulson says of the picture that "the Oxfordshire people ... are specifically rioting, as historically the London crowd did, to preserve the 'Eleven Days' the government stole from them in September 1752 by changing the calendar". [84] [w] Thus, the 'calendar riot' fiction was born.