Everybody knows you can balance an egg on the equinox, the day with 12 hours of light across the planet… right?


What You Need To Know

  • You can balance eggs and brooms any day, not just the equinox

  • Daylight is close to 12 hours, but not exactly

  • As fall begins in one hemisphere, spring begins in the other

There are many theories surrounding the equinox, which happens every year in March and September. Let's separate fact from fiction. 

Balancing eggs and brooms: Fiction

Odds are you’ve heard that you can balance an egg on the equinox, maybe because of some sort of special or mysterious gravitational situation that happens only on that day.

Try balancing an egg on a day other than the equinox, and you’ll find that you can do it then, too. It just takes the right egg and a bit of patience. Or boredom.

The egg-balancing myth swept over to brooms, which spread wildly thanks to social media. Just like eggs, you can balance a broom with stiff, straight bristles any day of the year.

A moment, not a day: Fact

The equinox happens when the sun passes the “celestial equator,” the imaginary line in the sky above the Earth’s equator. It’s just a fleeting moment in time. While we observe the equinox as the first day of spring or fall, it’s really just an instant.

12 hours of daylight worldwide: Fiction

No, there’s not exactly 12 hours of daylight and 12 hours of night around the globe on the equinox. We have more than 12 hours of daylight on the equinox. The date when daylight and nighttime are both closest to exactly 12 hours falls a few days before the spring equinox and a few days after the fall equinox.

So, why isn’t it exactly 12 hours? There are a handful of reasons, but two stand out. First, sunrise and sunset are when the very top-most tip of the sun–not the middle–crosses the horizon. Second, our atmosphere bends sunlight, so we actually see the sun a little longer than we “should,” so to speak.

“Equal night”: Fact

Just to make things a little confusing, “equinox” does translate to “equal night.” It comes from the Latin word aequinoctium–“aequi” meaning equal, and “nox” meaning night–according to Mirriam-Webster.

If you want to impress your friends (or maybe just make them roll their eyes), you can mention the equilux (“lux” coming from Latin for “light”). That’s the date when day and night are equal lengths, although a true equilux is pretty rare.

No shadow at noon: Fiction

For those of us in the Northern Hemisphere, our shadow will be shortest on the summer solstice when direct sunlight reaches the northernmost point of its annual journey. A person’s shadow disappears only where the sun is directly overhead, which isn’t anywhere close to home on the equinox.

Opposite seasons: Fact

What we call the fall equinox in the Northern Hemisphere is actually the spring equinox in the Southern Hemisphere. It might be hard to imagine, but our friends on the other side of the planet enjoy spring from late September through late December as the Earth’s tilt gives them increasingly direct sunlight.

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