Fact-checked by Grok 2 weeks ago

Sidereal year

The sidereal year is the time required for to complete one full revolution around the Sun relative to the , serving as a fundamental measure of the planet's in a stellar reference frame. This duration is precisely 365.25636 mean solar days, equivalent to approximately 365 days, 6 hours, 9 minutes, and 10 seconds. In contrast to the tropical year, which tracks the Sun's position relative to Earth's equinoxes and measures about 365.24219 mean solar days, the sidereal year is roughly 20 minutes longer. This discrepancy arises from the of Earth's rotational axis, a slow wobble that shifts the orientation of the equinoxes against the background stars over a cycle of about 25,772 years, causing the two year types to gradually diverge. Astronomers rely on the sidereal year for precise calculations involving , such as determining planetary positions relative to distant stars and modeling long-term orbital dynamics, where seasonal variations are irrelevant. It also underpins sidereal timekeeping systems, which track against the stellar backdrop, enabling accurate observations of celestial objects independent of the Sun's apparent motion. While civil calendars like the are aligned to the to maintain seasonal consistency, the sidereal year remains essential for astrophysical research and space mission planning.

Fundamentals

Definition

The sidereal year is defined as the mean time interval required for the to complete one full revolution with respect to the , representing the planet's in an inertial reference frame. This period measures the duration for to traverse 360 degrees along its orbital path, as determined by its position relative to the distant stellar background, independent of any perturbations from Earth's rotational axis. Conceptually, the sidereal year captures the Earth's orbital motion as an elliptical path , emphasizing the complete angular sweep against the inertial frame of the rather than local reference points like perihelion or aphelion. Although the orbit's elliptical shape influences the timing of specific orbital positions, the sidereal year focuses solely on the full relative to the unchanging positions of background stars. It is typically quantified in mean solar days, known as ephemeris days, or for high-precision applications, in centuries to account for long-term variations. From an external vantage point outside the solar system, the sidereal year can be visualized as the time elapsed until returns to the same angular position in its when tracked against the fixed patterns of constellations and distant , providing a stable measure of orbital dynamics uninfluenced by short-term solar system effects. In contrast to the , which aligns with seasonal cycles, the sidereal year serves as a fundamental benchmark for astronomical observations of Earth's heliocentric motion.

Distinction from Tropical Year

The sidereal year and the , while both measuring Earth's orbital period around , diverge due to the phenomenon of , which causes a gradual shift in the orientation of Earth's rotational . This results from gravitational torques exerted by and on Earth's , producing a slow wobble that completes one full cycle roughly every 26,000 years. As a consequence of this , the vernal equinox—the point where the intersects the —shifts westward against the background of at a rate of approximately 50 arcseconds per year. The , defined as the time for to complete one full relative to these distant stars, is thus longer than the , which measures the interval between successive vernal equinoxes, by about 20 minutes and 24 seconds. A conceptual diagram illustrating this distinction might depict Earth's elliptical orbital path around the Sun over one year, with the vernal position marked both relative to the stellar background and the Sun's apparent position along the ; arrows would show the precessional drift advancing the westward, requiring Earth to travel an additional angular distance in its to realign with the stars compared to returning to the seasonal point. This difference has significant implications for timekeeping and astronomy: the sidereal year serves as a stable reference aligned with unchanging stellar positions, essential for precise and long-term observations, while the tracks the seasonal cycle driven by Earth's tilt and , forming the foundation of calendars like the to ensure es and solstices remain synchronized with human activities.

Measurement and Length

Modern Value

The current accepted value of the sidereal year at the J2000.0 is 365.256363004 mean solar days, equivalent to 365 days, 6 hours, 9 minutes, and 9.76 seconds. This value is specified for the epoch January 1, 2000, at 12:00 and varies slightly over time due to orbital perturbations from other planets; it aligns with (IAU) standards and is derived from high-precision ephemerides such as the JPL Development Ephemeris DE430. The precision of this measurement is remarkable, accurate to within a few milliseconds, owing to integrations of observational data from missions like Voyager, which provided ranging data for planetary positions, and astrometric observations from the , which refined the celestial reference frame. For context, this makes the sidereal year approximately 20 minutes longer than the .

Calculation Methods

The primary method for calculating the sidereal year employs Newton's generalization of Kepler's third law, which relates the orbital period to the semi-major axis of the orbit. For Earth's orbit around the Sun, the sidereal year T is given by the formula T = 2\pi \sqrt{\frac{a^3}{GM}}, where a is the semi-major axis (defined as 1 AU), G is the gravitational constant, and M is the mass of the Sun. This approach assumes a two-body problem but provides a baseline value that is refined through more advanced techniques. Observational methods track Earth's position relative to distant reference points to determine the time for one complete orbit. Stellar aberration, caused by Earth's orbital velocity, produces an annual shift in star positions with a period equal to the sidereal year, allowing measurement through precise astrometric observations over a full cycle. Similarly, pulsar timing arrays monitor pulse arrival times from millisecond pulsars, revealing Earth's orbital motion via annual variations in the Roemer delay (light-travel time across the orbit), from which the sidereal period is derived by fitting the timing residuals. Numerical simulations integrate Earth's orbital elements, incorporating gravitational dynamics to propagate the position over time and identify the interval for returning to the initial stellar-aligned configuration. These calculations rely on standardized reference frames to define positions relative to the . The Celestial Reference Frame (ICRF), realized through quasi-stellar object positions, serves as the inertial frame for sidereal measurements, ensuring consistency in tracking against the distant . To obtain the sidereal year from observations (which align with the vernal ), precession effects are subtracted, as the equinox drifts due to Earth's axial wobble. Error sources, such as planetary perturbations, are accounted for using to adjust the baseline Keplerian period. Jupiter's gravitational influence, the dominant perturber, induces variations in Earth's , including small secular changes to the mean period, which are modeled through series expansions of disturbing potentials in numerical ephemerides. introduces a systematic offset, with the adjustment approximated as \Delta T \approx ( rate) \times ( length), where the rate is about 50.3 arcseconds per year, yielding a difference of roughly 20 minutes.

Historical Development

Ancient and Early Modern Estimates

Ancient Greek astronomers made early attempts to quantify the sidereal year, the time for the Sun to return to the same position relative to the . , in the 2nd century BCE, approximated it at 365 days plus 1/4 day plus 1/144 day, equivalent to approximately 365.25694 days, by analyzing Babylonian eclipse records and discovering the precession of the equinoxes, which allowed him to distinguish it from the . This value, corresponding to 365 days 6 hours 10 minutes, represented a significant advancement, though it relied on indirect stellar observations rather than direct measurements. Ptolemy, in his 2nd-century Almagest, built on Hipparchus's work and derived a sidereal year length of approximately 365 days 6 hours 9 minutes 50 seconds (365;15,24,31,32 days) through calculations incorporating effects on positions relative to stars. Although did not explicitly tabulate the sidereal year separately, his model's implied value emerged from adjustments to solar motion and stellar longitudes in planetary mean motions, achieving reasonable accuracy for the era despite using geocentric assumptions and limited observational data. In , in the calculated the sidereal year as 365 days 6 hours 12 minutes 30 seconds (365.25858 days) in his , employing trigonometric methods and eclipse timings to model and against the stars. This estimate was remarkably precise, erring by only about 3 minutes 20 seconds from modern values, and reflected a heliocentric-influenced framework that integrated sidereal timekeeping. Later, in the , Islamic refined the measurement to 365 days 5 hours 46 minutes 24 seconds using prolonged solar and stellar observations at , improving upon Ptolemaic figures through better instrumentation like astrolabes; his work contributed to better understanding of effects on sidereal periods. During the , Brahe's 16th-century naked-eye observations from yielded a of 365 days 5 hours 48 minutes 45 seconds, derived from meticulous tracking of planetary positions against star catalogs over decades. These data, accurate to within seconds, enabled to confirm elliptical orbits in the early , with his third law relating sidereal periods to semi-major axes, thus solidifying the sidereal year as the fundamental orbital metric in heliocentric models; Kepler used 's observations to derive sidereal periods approximately 20 minutes longer than the . These estimates were constrained by reliance on naked-eye observations and incomplete catalogs of , leading to frequent of sidereal and tropical years due to partial understanding of 's cumulative effects over centuries. , recognized but underestimated, caused apparent stellar shifts that obscured precise differentiation until refined techniques emerged.

19th and 20th Century Refinements

In the , advancements in allowed for more precise estimates of the sidereal year through the analysis of planetary perturbations. , in the 1850s, utilized these perturbations to derive a value of 365.25638 days for the sidereal year, building on earlier observations to account for gravitational influences from other . This approach marked a shift toward theoretical computations that reduced reliance on direct visual measurements. Simon Newcomb further refined the estimate in 1895, incorporating data from meridian circle observations at the U.S. Naval Observatory to arrive at 365.25636 days. Newcomb's work, detailed in his Astronomical Papers, integrated long-term positional data of the inner planets to minimize errors from atmospheric refraction and instrumental limitations, achieving an accuracy within seconds of the modern value. The early 20th century introduced subtle corrections from Albert Einstein's general theory of relativity, developed in the , which accounted for curvature effects on orbital motion. These adjustments had a minor impact on the sidereal year estimate, altering the length by only milliseconds annually due to relativistic perihelion precession and . In the 1920s, Gustav Spörer contributed to refinements through measurements, which indirectly improved solar parallax determinations essential for scaling Earth's orbit. By the , Gérard de Vaucouleurs employed photographic plates for astrometric surveys, yielding a sidereal year value of 365.25637 days by enhancing positional accuracy against background stars. A key milestone occurred in 1952 when the (IAU) adopted 365.256363 days as the standard value of the mean sidereal year for computations, aligning with the newly defined scale based on Newcomb's solar tables. This adoption facilitated uniform astronomical calculations amid growing recognition of Earth's rotational irregularities. The 1960s brought transformative precision via radar ranging to Venus, which refined the astronomical unit to within kilometers and thereby corroborated the sidereal year length by linking orbital dynamics to absolute distances. Observations from facilities like Lincoln Laboratory's Millstone radar provided direct s of interplanetary distances, reducing uncertainties in Keplerian elements. Overall, these centuries saw a transition from visual and theoretical methods to astrometric and radar techniques, shrinking measurement errors from several seconds to mere milliseconds and establishing the sidereal year as a cornerstone of dynamical astronomy.

Astronomical Significance

Relation to Other Orbital Periods

The sidereal year, defined as the time for to complete one orbit relative to the , contrasts with other orbital periods that incorporate additional dynamical effects from Earth's elliptical path and . The anomalistic year represents the interval between consecutive perihelion passages, where perihelion is Earth's closest point to ; its mean duration is 365.259636 days (of 86,400 seconds), approximately 4.7 minutes longer than the sidereal year of 365.256363 days. This extension arises from , the gradual rotation of the orbit's major axis due to gravitational perturbations from other and solar oblateness, occurring at a rate of about 11.6 arcseconds per year. The difference between the anomalistic and sidereal years, known as the anomalistic excess, approximates the product of the perihelion rate (expressed as a of a full per year) and the sidereal year length, yielding roughly 0.00326 days. In essence, the sidereal year disregards the orbit's captured in the anomalistic year, focusing purely on the orbital motion against the stellar background. The draconic year, or eclipse year, measures the time for the Sun's mean longitude to increase by 360 degrees relative to the ascending of the Moon's , with an average length of 346.620 days—about 19 days shorter than the sidereal year. This shortening results from the of the lunar nodes, a westward driven by solar tidal torques on Earth's , completing a full cycle every 18.6 years. Unlike the sidereal year, which ignores relative to the , the draconic year accounts for this tilt, making it essential for geometry. The sidereal year underpins predictions of long-term eclipse cycles like the Saros, a 6,585.32-day period (18 years 11 days 8 hours) where 242 draconic months, 223 synodic months, and 239 anomalistic months nearly align, repeating similar eclipse configurations; this harmony relies on the as the baseline for solar motion. For context, the —shorter than the sidereal by about 20 minutes due to Earth's —is another comparator but aligns more with seasonal cycles than stellar positions.

Applications in Astronomy and Calendars

In astronomy, the sidereal year underpins sidereal timekeeping systems used in observatories to monitor stellar positions relative to . Sidereal clocks, which complete a 24-hour cycle in 23 hours 56 minutes 4 seconds of , enable precise tracking of celestial events by aligning with the stars rather than . This is particularly vital for measuring , the celestial coordinate denoting an object's position eastward from the vernal equinox along the equator; when a star transits the local , the local equals its , facilitating accurate pointing and observations. For space missions, the sidereal year provides the reference for heliocentric planning, as it represents Earth's relative to distant stars, essential for modeling long-term positions in interplanetary . Missions like Voyager and , which traverse the solar system over decades, incorporate this period to predict alignments and encounters with . Similarly, GPS orbits are designed with periods of approximately half a sidereal day (11 hours 58 minutes) to achieve repeatable ground coverage and stable visibility patterns, optimizing global positioning accuracy. The sidereal year influences certain traditional calendars, notably the Hindu lunisolar system, where it defines the solar year as the time for the Sun to traverse the sidereal zodiac, aligning festivals and rituals with fixed stellar positions rather than seasonal shifts. This approach uses a year length of about 365.256 days, integrating lunar months with intercalary adjustments to maintain synchronization. Modern sidereal clocks extend this precision to contemporary astronomical timing, supporting observations that require star-referenced coordination. Despite these applications, the sidereal year is seldom adopted for civil calendars due to axial precession, which causes seasonal drift relative to the tropical year. The sidereal year exceeds the tropical by roughly 20 minutes annually, resulting from precession at 50.3 arcseconds per year; over centuries, this accumulates as a misalignment between calendar dates and equinoxes. Adjustments in calendars account for this via the relation Drift ≈ (sidereal length - tropical length) × centuries (in days), ensuring alignment with seasonal cycles rather than fixed stars.

References

  1. [1]
    Glossary - Astronomical Applications Department
    year, sidereal: the period of revolution of the Earth around the Sun in a fixed reference frame. It is the mean period of the Earth's revolution with respect to ...
  2. [2]
    [PDF] NA A OR I 7 b - NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
    Thus, the sidereal year is the period of revolution with respect to the fixed stars, the anomalistic year is the period from one perihelion passage to the ...<|separator|>
  3. [3]
    Sidereal Period | COSMOS
    - **Definition**: The sidereal period is the time it takes for a planet to complete one orbit around the Sun relative to the fixed stars.
  4. [4]
    Sidereal vs. Synodic - Motions of the Sun - NAAP - UNL Astronomy
    A sidereal year is the time it takes for the sun to return to the same position with respect to the stars. Due to the precession of the equinoxes the sidereal ...
  5. [5]
    [PDF] An introduction to orbit dynamics and its application to satellite ...
    Thus, a sidereal year is basedon the motion of the Earth relative to the stars - the cycle time for astronomical observation. A year defined relative to the ...
  6. [6]
    Astrodynamic Parameters - JPL Solar System Dynamics
    Astrodynamic Parameters ; sidereal year (quasar ref. frame), 365.25636 d ; Newtonian constant of gravitation, G · 6.67430 (± 0.00015) x 10-11 kg-1 m3 s ; general ...
  7. [7]
    Chapter 2: Reference Systems - NASA Science
    Jan 16, 2025 · Its rotation relative to "fixed" stars (sidereal time) is 3 minutes ... The "J" means Julian year, which is 365.25 days long. Only the ...Chapter Objectives · Terrestrial Coordinates · Precession of Earth's Axis...
  8. [8]
    Months and Years
    The sidereal year and the tropical year differ because of precession of the equinoxes (which is caused by the precession of the Earth's rotation axis).
  9. [9]
    sidereal_solar_time_1b.html - UNLV Physics
    The Julian year = 365.25 standard metric days exactly by definition is slightly longer than the average year of the Gregorian calendar.Missing: IAU resolution
  10. [10]
    The Planetary and Lunar Ephemerides DE430 and DE431
    The planetary and lunar ephemerides DE430 and DE431 are generated by fitting numerically integrated orbits of the Moon and planets to observations.
  11. [11]
    [PDF] The Planetary and Lunar Ephemerides DE430 and DE431 - NASA
    Feb 15, 2014 · The ephemeris DE431 is similar to DE430 but was fit without the core/mantle damping term, so the lunar orbit is less accurate than in DE430 for ...
  12. [12]
    Tidal Friction - HyperPhysics
    From the Mercury planetary data we find that the sidereal period of ... length of the day by about 2.3 milliseconds per century. A million years ...Missing: lengthening | Show results with:lengthening
  13. [13]
    Orbits and Kepler's Laws - NASA Science
    May 2, 2024 · Newton's version of Kepler's third law allows us to calculate the masses of any two objects in space if we know the distance between them and ...Missing: sidereal | Show results with:sidereal
  14. [14]
  15. [15]
    Kepler's Third Law - Astronomy 505
    a3 = T2, showing that if we measure the sidereal period, T, of a planet in Earth-years, we can obtain its mean distance from the Sun, a, in AU. Kepler showed ...
  16. [16]
    A Pictorial Explanation of Stellar Aberration | The Physics Teacher
    Oct 1, 2019 · Stellar aberration is the phenomenon whereby the observed angular position of a star depends on the relative motion between the star and Earth.Missing: sidereal | Show results with:sidereal
  17. [17]
    Chapter 6 Pulsars
    Pulsar positions on the sky are determined by timing a pulsar over the course of a year as the Earth orbits the Sun and tracking the changing Roemer delay.
  18. [18]
    Description of Orbits and Ephemerides - JPL Solar System Dynamics
    We adopt the International Celestial Reference Frame (ICRF), a three-dimensional cartesian (x,y,z) system whose three basis axes are defined relative to over ...
  19. [19]
    International Celestial Reference System (ICRS)
    The International Celestial Reference System (ICRS) is the fundamental celestial reference system adopted by the International Astronomical Union (IAU)<|control11|><|separator|>
  20. [20]
    [PDF] 2 Conventional celestial reference system and frame
    The celestial reference system is based on a kinematical definition, yielding fixed axis directions with respect to the distant matter of the universe.
  21. [21]
    Quantifying the Influence of Jupiter on the Earth's Orbital Cycles
    Multiple significant cycles coexist in the variability of Earth's orbital eccentricity and inclination at any given Jupiter–Sun distance. This is because ...
  22. [22]
    [PDF] CHAPTER 4 PRECESSION OF THE EARTH'S AXIS - TCNJ
    The sidereal year is the time for the Earth to revolve exactly. 360 degrees in orbit around the Sun and is the true period of revolution of the Earth in orbit.
  23. [23]
    Hipparchus (190 BC - Biography - MacTutor History of Mathematics
    Hipparchus also calculated the length of the sidereal year, again using older Babylonian data, and arrived at the highly accurate figure of 1441 days longer ...
  24. [24]
    The history of the tropical year
    ... tropical year. Thanks to his discovery of precession, Hipparchus, for the first time, made the distinction between the sidereal year and the tropical year.Missing: formula | Show results with:formula
  25. [25]
    [PDF] A Year Length Hidden in Ancient Planetary Mean Motions
    The error in the year length used appears to be larger than the error in the Almagest sidereal year, suggesting that the original analysis that Ptolemy.
  26. [26]
    A Survey of the Almagest
    Our most important source for Greek astronomy is Ptolemy's Almagest composed in the middle of the second century, and its influence was deeply felt until well ...
  27. [27]
    [PDF] Aryabha~a and Axial Rotation of Earth - Indian Academy of Sciences
    But more significant is Aryabhata's accurate estimate of the duration of a sidereal day. We first define the sidereal year. Sidereal Solar Year. A solar year is ...<|separator|>
  28. [28]
    Al-Battani (868 - 929) - Biography - MacTutor History of Mathematics
    He refined the existing values for the length of the year, which he gave as 365 days 5 hours 46 minutes 24 seconds, and of the seasons. He calculated 54.5" per ...Missing: sidereal estimate
  29. [29]
    Tycho Brahe (1546-1601) | High Altitude Observatory
    Tycho's triangular Sextant, about 1.6 meter in radius, was built in 1582. As Tycho's sextants grew in size, they became fixed instruments, although Tycho's ...Missing: sidereal | Show results with:sidereal
  30. [30]
    phy105 - celestial mechanics - kepler's third law - vik dhillon
    Finally, in 1619, he published his third law - the harmonic law: The squares of the sidereal periods of the planets are proportional to the cubes of the semi- ...
  31. [31]
    [PDF] The Ptolemaic universe - Math (Princeton)
    Ptolemy refers to observations made by Hipparchus between 161 and 126 BC. more technical, but now lost, work of Eudoxus) describing the risings and settings of ...
  32. [32]
    Historical Perspectives on Copernicus's Account of Precession
    Let S be the length of the sidereal year, T be the length of the tropical year, μ be the daily solar motion, and p the annual increment in stellar longitudes ...
  33. [33]
    Astronomical Papers of the U.S. Naval Observatory - CNMOC
    Secular Variations Of The Orbits Of The Four Inner Planets. V.5 No.5 1895. Newcomb, Simon On The Mass Of Jupiter And The Orbit Of Polyhymnia.Missing: sidereal | Show results with:sidereal
  34. [34]
    On the History of the Statistical Method in Astronomy - jstor
    O. B. Sheynin, On the History of the Statistical Method in Astronomy, Archive for History of Exact Sciences, Vol. 29, No. 2 (1984), pp. 151-199.
  35. [35]
    Gérard De Vaucouleurs | Biographical Memoirs: Volume 82
    Gérard was delighted to join this program, both in taking the photographic plates during the night and in the daytime measuring them on the large two-coordinate ...Missing: sidereal | Show results with:sidereal
  36. [36]
    Ephemeris Time (Chapter 6) - Time: From Earth Rotation to Atomic ...
    Oct 1, 2018 · This 1950 Paris recommendation was adopted by the IAU Commission on Time (Trans. Int. Astron. Union, Reference Oosterhoff1954) at the IAU ...
  37. [37]
    The astronomical unit determined by radar reflections from Venus
    The ranging receiver automatically tracked the received code, and the phase-measuring device provided a continuous real-time measurement of range. A single code ...Missing: sidereal | Show results with:sidereal
  38. [38]
    On Physicists' Attempts to Time Light's Wings and Solve Astronomy's ...
    Amongst the various methods of establishing the distance of the sun to the earth, by the late 19th century measures of the velocity of light had taken a ...
  39. [39]
    The Seasons and the Earth's Orbit
    Basically, the tropical year is the year of a complete cycle of seasons, so it is natural that we use it for ordinary purposes. But we can also measure the ...
  40. [40]
    Year | Encyclopedia MDPI
    The anomalistic year is usually defined as the time between perihelion passages. Its average duration is 365.259636 days (365 d 6 h 13 min 52.6 s) (at the ...
  41. [41]
    Milankovitch (Orbital) Cycles and Their Role in Earth's Climate
    Feb 27, 2020 · The cycle of apsidal precession spans about 112,000 years. Apsidal precession changes the orientation of Earth's orbit relative to the ecliptic ...Missing: sidereal | Show results with:sidereal
  42. [42]
    Perihelion Precession of the Planets - Richard Fitzpatrick
    We can calculate the approximate rate of perihelion precession of a given planet by treating the other planets as uniform concentric rings, centered on the Sun.Missing: sidereal | Show results with:sidereal<|separator|>
  43. [43]
    Moon Essentials: Seasons - NASA Scientific Visualization Studio
    Feb 23, 2024 · The complete seasonal cycle on the Moon is its draconic year of about 346.6 Earth days. This is shorter than an Earth year.Missing: length | Show results with:length
  44. [44]
    NASA - Eclipses and the Saros
    Jan 12, 2012 · One Saros is equal to 223 synodic months. However, 239 anomalistic months and 242 draconic months are also equal to this same period (to within ...
  45. [45]
    Sidereal Time - Astronomical Applications Department
    Because every celestial object has a right ascension coordinate, the sidereal time indicates which ones are at the highest point in their daily arcs across the ...
  46. [46]
    Local Sidereal Time - Astronomy at Durham
    A sidereal clock is designed to complete 24 hours of sidereal time in 23h 56m 04s of civil (solar) time. As such a clock runs at the same rate as the Earth's ...
  47. [47]
    The Space Segment | GEOG 862 - Dutton Institute - Penn State
    Since each satellite is nearly three times the earth's radius above the surface, its orbital period is 12 sidereal hours. The sidereal (star time) timescale is ...<|separator|>
  48. [48]
    The Hindu Calendar as Described in Al-Bīrūnī's Masudic Canon
    A (sidereal) year in this paper is taken to be the mean length of time required by the sun to pass through the twelve signs of the zodiac. 1 Study supported ...
  49. [49]
    Understanding - Fundamental concepts - The seasons - IMCCE
    The precession of the equinoxes and the length of the tropical year ... The second method is to measure the gap between the tropical year and the sidereal year .<|separator|>
  50. [50]
    How a seasonal snarl-up in the mid-1500s gave us our strange rules ...
    Feb 28, 2020 · In other words, if we tied our calendar to the sidereal year, the seasons would still shift through the calendar! The seasons on Earth are ...