In the northern hemisphere, sun outages occur before the March equinox ( February, March ) and after the September equinox ( September and October ), and in the southern hemisphere the outages occur after the March equinox and before the September equinox.
22.
In the northern hemisphere, sun outages occur before the March equinox ( February, March ) and after the September equinox ( September and October ), and in the southern hemisphere the outages occur after the March equinox and before the September equinox.
23.
Some people believe that the white-tailed deer rut is also controlled by the lunar phase and that the rut peaks seven days after the second full moon during October and November ( the rutting moon ), while elk begin rutting during the September equinox autumnal equinox on 21 September.
24.
:Only around the March and September equinox will the sun rise approximately in the east, between March and September, it will be more to the north, between September and March more to the south, as the sun calculator given by ToE demonstrates . talk ) 10 : 45, 30 September 2013 ( UTC)
25.
The path of the Sun lies entirely in the northern half of the sky for the period from the March Equinox to the September Equinox and is entirely in the southern half of the sky from the September Equinox to the March Equinox, with the Sun passing directly overhead at noon on the equinoxes.
26.
The path of the Sun lies entirely in the northern half of the sky for the period from the March Equinox to the September Equinox and is entirely in the southern half of the sky from the September Equinox to the March Equinox, with the Sun passing directly overhead at noon on the equinoxes.
27.
For observers in either hemisphere not at the poles, the further one goes in time away from the September equinox in the 3 months before that equinox, the more to the north the Sun has been rising and setting, and for the 3 months afterwards it rises and sets more and more to the south.
28.
The orbital ellipse ( with eccentricity exaggerated for effect ) goes through each of the six Earth images, which are sequentially the aphelion ( apoapsis farthest point from the sun ) on anywhere from 4 July to 7 July, the September equinox on 22 or 23 September, and the December solstice on 21 or 22 December.