EPISODE · Jun 20, 2026 · 1 MIN
Summer’s Longest Days, Sun’s Farthest Point
from Pittsburgh News Today | 2 Min News | The Daily News Now!
Summer’s the longest season of the year—93 days, 15 hours, 40 minutes—and while it’s the hottest, the sun is actually farthest from Earth during this time, at aphelion. That’s right: the sun looks smaller in the sky, but Earth’s 23.5-degree tilt ensures our hemisphere gets more direct, intense heat. It’s all about the angle, not the distance—because even though Earth is 3 million miles farther from the sun than in winter, that barely registers. Think of it like a supermoon: closer = bigger, farther = smaller—but with the sun, you’d need side-by-side visuals to notice the difference. So enjoy the long, hot days—thanks to tilt, not distance. Support the show:Get a discount at https://solipillow.com/discount/dnn. Advertise on DNN:[email protected] This is an automated, high-level news summary based on public reporting.Report issues to [email protected]. View sources & latest updates:https://sources.thednn.ai/485bd131489bcbae
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Summer’s Longest Days, Sun’s Farthest Point
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