The Solstice – Lazy Scientific Journalism updated

Sometimes a video can convey a message better than a simple blog post and videos tend to reach a slightly different audience. I do get irritated by poor reporting of science topics in the mainstream media (maybe I am getting grumpy? 😊 ).

So here’s a  video about the errors in the article about the solstice which appeared in the British online newspaper “The Independent”.

Original post below….

I am still surprised how many articles on otherwise reputable websites when writing about scientific topics are riddled with errors and have clearly been written by lazy journalists with no knowledge of the subject they’re talking about.

One of the worst examples was an article on the December 2023 solstice which recently appeared on a popular British online newspaper “The Independent”. I’ve put the first part of it here.

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Source  https://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/winter-solstice-2023-when-b2468311.html retrieved 22 December 2023

It is truly amazing that such a short article can contain so many statements that are simply wrong. So, let’s have a look at it again.

The article says the solstice “will begin on 4:44pm GMT on 22 December”

WRONG: The December solstice doesn’t begin then, it is an event which occurs at a particular time. The December solstice occurs when the Earth’s North Pole is tilted furthest away from the Sun, which happened at 3:27 AM GMT. the journalists writing this could have easily checked when the 2023 December solstice occurs by checking with a reputable website such as https://www.timeanddate.com/calendar/winter-solstice.html . I wonder where on Earth they got 4:44 pm from!?

If I’m being really picky, in precise writing the term UTC (which stands for Coordinated Universal Time) should be used rather than GMT but I’m probably being too pedantic by mentioning this, because GMT is widely used by the general public.

“Arriving on the same day across the globe, a solstice occurs….”

WRONG The date the solstice falls on depends on the time zone. For example in San Francisco, which is on the Pacific time zone, 8 hours behind UTC, the solstice occurred  at 7:27 pm on December 21.

“The solstice also occurs when the sun is directly over the Tropic of Capricorn”.

This is badly written. The tropic of Capricorn is a line of latitude running approximately 23.44 degrees south. Clearly the Sun cannot be overhead everywhere on a line of latitude at the same time. At some places located  on the tropic of Capricorn it was dark at 3:27 am when the solstice occurred! What it should have said is

 “….at the December solstice, the location where the Sun is directly overhead lies on the tropic of Capricorn”.

“…a solstice occurs when the sun reaches its lowest or highest point in the sky during the year as a result of the Earth’s axis tilting to or away from the sun.

This is badly written and incorrect. The true situation is more complicated.

For locations which don’t lie at polar latitudes, the Sun reaches its lowest point in the sky twice a day every single day of the year. This happens at sunrise and sunset! I guess what the authors really meant to say is:

 “…at the solstice the Sun reaches either  its lowest maximum elevation (for locations in the Northern Hemisphere) or its greatest maximum elevation (for locations in the Southern Hemisphere)

However, although this is true for most locations on Earth, it isn’t true for all locations on the Earth. The true position is a little more complicated. I’ve put a summary here.

LatitudeSun’s maximum elevationHours of daylight
Above Arctic CircleSun below horizon all dayZero
On Arctic CircleLowest value of the year. Sun briefly just above the horizonLowest value of the year (Few minutes)
Between Arctic Circle and EquatorLowest value of the yearLowest value of the year
On EquatorJoint lowest value of the year. The June solstice is the other dateAll days have same hours of daylight throughout the year
Between Tropic of Capricorn and the EquatorNeither the lowest nor the highest value of the year.Highest value of the year
On the Tropic of CapricornHighest value of the year. Sun directly overheadHighest value of the year
Between Tropic of Capricorn and Antarctic circleHighest value of the yearHighest value of the year
On or below Antarctic circleHighest value of the year24 hours

If you want to know the detail behind this then watch the video on my YouTube channel 🙂

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