Tropic of Cancer


The Tropic of Cancer, which is also referred to as the Northern Tropic, is the most northerly circle of latitude on Earth at which the Sun can be directly overhead. This occurs on the June solstice, when the Northern Hemisphere is tilted toward the Sun to its maximum extent. It also reaches 90 degrees below the horizon at solar midnight on the December Solstice. Using a continuously updated formula, the circle is currently north of the Equator.
Its Southern Hemisphere counterpart, marking the most southerly position at which the Sun can be directly overhead, is the Tropic of Capricorn. These tropics are two of the five major circles of latitude that mark maps of Earth, the others being the Arctic and Antarctic Circles and the Equator. The positions of these two circles of latitude are dictated by the tilt of Earth's axis of rotation relative to the plane of its orbit, and since the tilt changes, the location of these two circles also changes.

Name

When this line of latitude was named in the last centuries BC, the Sun was in the constellation Cancer at the June solstice, the time each year that the Sun reaches its zenith at this latitude. Due to the precession of the equinoxes, this is no longer the case; today the Sun is in Taurus at the June solstice. The word "tropic" itself comes from the Greek "trope ", meaning turn, inclination, referring to the fact that the Sun appears to "turn back" at the solstices.

Drift

The Tropic of Cancer's position is not fixed, but constantly changes because of a slight wobble in the Earth's longitudinal alignment relative to the ecliptic, the plane in which the Earth orbits around the Sun. Earth's axial tilt varies over a 41,000-year period from 22.1 to 24.5 degrees, and as of 2000 is about 23.4 degrees, which will continue to remain valid for about a millennium. This wobble means that the Tropic of Cancer is currently drifting southward at a rate of almost half an arcsecond of latitude, or 15 metres, per year. The circle's position was at exactly 23° 27′N in 1917 and will be at 23° 26'N in 2045. Distance between Antarctic Circle and Tropic of Cancer is essentially constant as they move in tandem.
See axial tilt and circles of latitude for additional details.

Geography

North of the tropic are the subtropics and the North Temperate Zone. The equivalent line of latitude south of the Equator is called the Tropic of Capricorn, and the region between the two, centered on the Equator, is the tropics.
There are approximately 13 hours, 35 minutes of daylight during the summer solstice. During the winter solstice, there are 10 hours, 41 minutes of daylight.
Using 23°26'N for the Tropic of Cancer, the tropic passes through the following countries and territories starting at the prime meridian and heading eastward:
Co-ordinatesCountry, territory or seaNotes
The Tropic touches on the northernmost point of at
The Tropic passes through Lake Nasser
Red Sea
Abu Dhabi emirate only
The tropic crosses Masqat, country's Capital.
Indian OceanArabian Sea
States of Gujarat, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand and West Bengal
Khulna, Dhaka, and Chittagong Divisions
State of Tripura
Chittagong Division
State of Mizoram
Chin State, Sagaing Division, Mandalay Division, Shan State
Provinces of Yunnan, Guangxi, and Guangdong
Taiwan Strait
Hujing Island, Chiayi County, Hualien County
Philippine Sea
Pacific OceanPassing just south of Necker Island, Hawaii,
State of Baja California Sur
Gulf of California
States of Sinaloa, Durango, Zacatecas, San Luis Potosí, Nuevo León, and Tamaulipas
Gulf of Mexico
Atlantic OceanPassing through the Straits of Florida and the Nicholas Channel
Passing just south of the Anguilla Cays
Passing through the Santaren Channel and into the open ocean
Exuma Islands and Long Island
Atlantic Ocean
Western SaharaClaimed by and the

Climate

Excluding cooler highland regions in China, the climate at the Tropic of Cancer is generally hot and dry except for easterly coastal areas where orographic rainfall can be very heavy, in some places reaching annually. Most regions on the Tropic of Cancer experience two distinct seasons: an extremely hot summer with temperatures often reaching and a warm winter with maxima around. Much land on or near the Tropic of Cancer is part of the Sahara Desert, while to the east the climate is torrid monsoonal with a short wet season from June to September and very little rainfall for the rest of the year.
The highest mountain on or adjacent to the Tropic of Cancer is Yu Shan in Taiwan; though it had glaciers descending as low as during the Last Glacial Maximum, none survive and at present no glaciers exist within of the Tropic of Cancer; the nearest currently surviving are the Minyong and Baishui in the Himalayas to the north and on Iztaccíhuatl to the south.

Circumnavigation

According to the rules of the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale, for a flight to compete for a round-the-world speed record, it must cover a distance no less than the length of the Tropic of Cancer, cross all meridians, and end on the same airfield where it started.
Length of the Tropic of Cancer at 23°26′11.8″N is .
For an ordinary circumnavigation the rules are somewhat relaxed and the distance is set to a rounded value of at least.

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