by Ann » Tue Jul 04, 2017 5:28 am
The reason why the Summer Triangle seems to dominate the western sky for months on end in the autumn is that while the Summer Triangle admittedly sinks lower and lower, darkness is falling earlier and earlier. On Christmas Day, for example, the sun sets at around 3.35 p.m. where I live, and it's pitch dark at 5 p.m. And at 5 p.m., the Summer Triangle is still high and glorious in the western sky.
In January the Summer Triangle is really sinking, and daylight is very slowly returning to our late afternoons. But on January 25 it is still dark at 5 p.m., and Altair of the Summer Triangle is still visible in the western sky. Deneb and Vega never sinks below the horizon at my latitude.
Ann
The reason why the Summer Triangle seems to dominate the western sky for months on end in the autumn is that while the Summer Triangle admittedly sinks lower and lower, darkness is falling earlier and earlier. On Christmas Day, for example, the sun sets at around 3.35 p.m. where I live, and it's pitch dark at 5 p.m. And at 5 p.m., the Summer Triangle is still high and glorious in the western sky.
In January the Summer Triangle is really sinking, and daylight is very slowly returning to our late afternoons. But on January 25 it is still dark at 5 p.m., and Altair of the Summer Triangle is still visible in the western sky. Deneb and Vega never sinks below the horizon at my latitude.
Ann