From the Tallahassee Democrat
“On Earth, there are 86,400 seconds in each day, give or take one additional millisecond during El Niños and one fewer during La Niñas. Around this week’s summer solstice, the sun is up in Florida for roughly 50,000 of those seconds, for 45,000 of which, it is basically a McDonalds fry lamp broiling everything in sight. Meteorological summer includes all of June, July, and August, but June 21st, the year’s longest day, marks the beginning of astronomical summer. In 2022, Florida’s summer has already been both astronomical and retrograde, and not just because a rare pre-dawn alignment of five planets is delighting skywatchers and changing the numbers beneath scratch-off ticket foil. Rather, the state remains in the grip of a massive heat wave and will be for a few more days.” |