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Friday, August 3, 2018

Did You Miss 'Manhattanhenge' in 2018? Good News: It's Coming Back ...
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Manhattanhenge, also called the Manhattan Solstice, is an event during which the setting sun or the rising sun is aligned with the east-west streets of the main street grid of Manhattan, New York City. The sunsets and sunrises each align twice a year, on dates evenly spaced around the summer solstice and winter solstice. The sunset alignment occurs around May 28 and around July 13. The sunrise alignment occurs around December 5 and around January 8.


Video Manhattanhenge



Explanation and details

The term "Manhattanhenge" was popularized by Neil deGrasse Tyson, an astrophysicist at the American Museum of Natural History and a native New Yorker. It is a reference to Stonehenge, a prehistoric monument located in Wiltshire, England, which was constructed so that the rising sun, seen from the center of the monument at the time of the summer solstice, aligns with the outer "Heel Stone".

In accordance with the Commissioners' Plan of 1811, the street grid for most of Manhattan is rotated 29° clockwise from true east-west. Thus, when the azimuth for sunset is 299° (i.e., 29° north of due West), the sunset aligns with the streets on that grid. A more impressive visual spectacle, and the one commonly referred to as Manhattanhenge, occurs a couple of days after the first such date of the year, and a couple of days before the second date, when a pedestrian looking down the centerline of the street westward towards New Jersey can see the full solar disk slightly above the horizon and in between the profiles of the buildings. The date shifts are due to the sunset time being when the last of the sun just disappears below the horizon.

The precise dates of Manhattanhenge depend on the date of the summer solstice, which varies from year to year but remains close to June 21. In 2014, the "full sun" Manhattanhenge occurred on May 30 at 8:18 p.m., and on July 11 at 8:24 p.m. The event has attracted increasing attention in recent years.

The dates on which sunrise aligns with the streets on the Manhattan grid are evenly spaced around the winter solstice, and correspond approximately to December 5 and January 8.


Maps Manhattanhenge



Occurrences

In the following table, "full sun" refers to occurrences of the full solar disk just above the horizon, and "half sun" refers to occurrences of the solar disk partially hidden below the horizon.


Manhattanhenge: It's all about the angles
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Related phenomena in other cities

The same phenomenon happens in other cities with a uniform street grid and an unobstructed view of the horizon. If the streets on the grid were rigorously north-south and east-west, then both sunrise and sunset would be aligned on the days of the vernal and autumnal equinoxes (which occur around March 20 and September 23 respectively). In Baltimore, for instance, sunrise aligns on March 25 and September 18 and sunset on March 12 and September 29. In Chicago, the setting sun lines up with the grid system on March 20 and September 25, a phenomenon dubbed Chicagohenge.

In Toronto, the setting sun lines up with the east-west streets on February 16 and October 25, a phenomenon known locally as Torontohenge. In Montreal, there may be a Montrealhenge each year around June 12.

When the architects designing the city center of Milton Keynes, in the United Kingdom, discovered that its main street almost framed the rising sun on Midsummer Day and the setting sun on Midwinter Day, they consulted Greenwich Observatory to obtain the exact angle required at their latitude, and persuaded their engineers to shift the grid of roads a few degrees.

In Cambridge, Massachusetts, MIThenge occurs about January 11 and November 29. The setting sun can be seen across the length of the "Infinite Corridor", at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).


Manhattanhenge Photo Opportunity - Mimeo Photos Blog
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In popular culture

  • "Manhattanhenge" was the title and a major plot element of the episode of CSI: NY that originally aired on November 25, 2009.
  • The Manhattanhenge phenomenon is the subject of the xkcd internet comic 1622, titled "Henge".
  • The phenomenon occurs at the end of the tenth episode of the third season of the TV series Younger, "Pigeons, Parrots & Storks."

Manhattanhenge รข€
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See also

  • Stonehenge replicas and derivatives
  • Street canyon

The best photos from Manhattanhenge | Travel + Leisure
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References


Where to go if you want to see Manhattanhenge in 2017 | Travel + ...
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External links

Media

  • Flickr photos tagged with Manhattanhenge
  • Video interpretation of Manhattanhenge
  • Video on Science Friday website
  • Manhattanhenge, NOVA scienceNOW, first broadcast September 14, 2006

Discussion

  • Hayden Planetarium discussion

Images and maps

  • Manhattanhenge images on Yahoo! news July 12, 2011
  • Interactive map showing Manhattanhenge visibility by time of year

Source of article : Wikipedia