STEVE JASIECKI/Using the Ventnor Fishing Pier as a measuring stick, you can see how the Sun rises in different locations throughout the year. The top image is the summer solstice in June, the middle image is the equinox in September and March, and the bottom image is the winter solstice in December
What may not be as noticeable is that where the sun rises and sets changes slightly every day. As we approach summer, the sun rises a little more to the north each day until the solstice. Once we reach the summer solstice, the sun rises at the same spot for several days, then the sun reverses its direction and rises a little more south each day until we reach the winter solstice. At that point, the sun will rise in the same position for a few days, reverse its direction and then start to rise a little more north each day until the summer solstice. This movement is also true for where the sun sets.
The time when the sun stops its northern or southern migration was given the name solstice which literally means, Sun stands still." At the mid point of Earth's journey between the solstices - March for spring and September for fall - the Earth experiences an equal amount of daylight and nighttime hours. This period is called the equinox meaning equal night."
Of course, the sun isn't doing the moving. The change of position is due to the Earth's 23.4-degree tilt. As the earth revolves around the Sun, the angle of the Earth changes position in relation to where we see the sun as it rises and sets.
If the Earth's poles were perpendicular to the sun, meaning no tilt, we wouldn't experience any change in the seasons and the sun would rise and set at the same spot everyday.
The summer will continue to get warmer as it takes awhile for the oceans and land masses to heat up as there is a time lag due to the Earth's absorption of the Sun's energy.
On the day of the summer solstice, the Sun will rise at 5:30 a.m. at 58 degrees east-northeast. It will set at 8:26 p.m. at 302 degrees west-northwest. We will have 14 hours and 56 minutes of daylight. Solar noon, when the sun is highest in the sky, will be at 12:58 p.m. (DST) at an angle of 74 degrees. The Earth will be 94.5 million miles from the Sun.
Happy solstice, and enjoy the summer.