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Lāhainā Noon

Twice a year, in May and July, the Sun passes directly overhead in Hawaiʻi. On these two days, around local noon, the Sun will be exactly overhead, at a 90o angle, and an upright object such as a flagpole will have no shadow. This phenomenon only occurs in the tropics; the Sun is never directly overhead on any other part of the planet. Hawaiʻi is the only U.S. state in the tropics and thus the only state where this occurs. In 1990 Bishop Museum held a contest to give a name to this phenomenon. The winner was “lāhainā noon.”

This image was taken during lāhainā noon. The pole has no shadow and the tree and building in the background show their shadows directly below them. During lāhainā noon the Sun is exactly 90 degrees overhead shining straight down.

The word lāhainā may be translated into English as “cruel sun,” but effectively makes reference to severe droughts experienced in that part of the island of Maui.

While the contemporary term lāhainā noon is often used today, an older term in ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi (Hawaiian language) for this observable phenomena is kau ka lā i ka lolo, which can be understood to mean “the sun rests upon the brain.” The phrase, “kau ka lā i ka lolo, a hoʻi ke aka i ke kino,” also makes reference not only to this special time, but the cultural significance of its observance.

Mary Kawena Pukui (1979) relates in the book “Nānā I Ke Kumu, Volume 1,” that the phrase references high noon, when the sun is directly overhead and the shadow (aka) retreats into the body. In Hawaiʻi and in other parts of the Pacific, the poʻo (head) is a sacred part of the body, and actions or rituals involving the head are very significant.

The term aka is also described in “Nānā I Ke Kumu, Volume 1,” as the essence or spiritual form of many things, particularly food offerings intended for deities. The aka as shadow is also understood to have a close connection to a living person’s spirit. For example, an aliʻi kapu (sacred chief of high rank) would avoid letting his or her shadow fall upon someone of lesser status, and vice versa, because such an interaction would have a negative impact on the mana each held respectively.

During this special time of the day, certain rituals might be planned and conducted, as high noon “was thought of as a time of great mana (spiritual power),” according to Pukui. Offerings and prayers to ancestral deities or the administration of lāʻau lapaʻau (traditional medicine) might be done to maximize their delivery.

While the term tropical is often used to describe a location with sunshine, warm weather, and palm trees, there is a technical definition as well. It has to do with latitude, the measure of north and south on Earth. The Equator is the imaginary line around the middle of Earth at 0o latitude, neither north nor south. The North Pole is 90o north and the South Pole is 90o south. The tropics is the region of the Earth between the lines of latitude at 23.5o north of the Equator (the Tropic of Cancer) and 23.5o south of the Equator (the Tropic of Capricorn).

These two latitudes are noteworthy because they mark the northern and southern range of where the Sun shines down on Earth from directly overhead at least once during the year. The location where the Sun is directly overhead is also known as the sub-solar point. Any upright object like a flagpole won’t cast a shadow at all and a person standing outside will have their shadow directly under them. The sub-solar point moves north and south through the tropics throughout the year. Let’s walk through one year to visualize this.

At the Tropic of Cancer in the Northern Hemisphere, the day the Sun shines down from directly overhead is the June Solstice, the first day of Summer for the Northern Hemisphere, usually June 21st. Through the year as the Earth goes around the Sun from there, the sub-solar point moves south. Hawaiʻi, which is located from about 22.5o north on Kauaʻi to about 19o north at South Point on the Big Island, experiences lāhainā noon in mid to late July each year. The Sun is directly overhead first on Kauaʻi, then gradually moves south through the islands until about 14 days later it is directly overhead at South Point on the Big Island. The Sun is seen directly overhead from the Equator on the day of the September Equinox, the first day of Autumn in the Northern Hemisphere. The Earth keeps moving around the Sun and the sub-solar point moves further and further south. The Sun is directly overhead at the Tropic of Capricorn, 23.5o south on the day of the December Solstice, usually about December 21st each year. This is the first day of Winter for the Northern Hemisphere. The Earth never stops moving around the Sun, and from here the sub-solar point moves back north, passing the Equator again at the March Equinox, the first day of Spring in the Northern Hemisphere. Lāhainā noon occurs again in Hawaiʻi in May, moving from south to north through the islands. A year after we started, the Sun is again directly overhead at the Tropic of Cancer, 23.5o north for the June Solstice. From there it moves south again continuing the cycle.

23.5o is also the tilt of Earth’s axis. It’s not a coincidence that the angle of Earth’s tilted axis is the same as the latitude of the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn. Picture the solar system in your head like looking at the edge of a dinner plate. The Sun is in the middle, and the planets appear on the left and right side. The plate is flat; this is the plane of the solar system. Straight up is 90o. Now if we picture Earth, it’s moving around the Sun, but it’s also spinning around like a basketball spinning on a finger. The imaginary line from the tip of your finger through the basketball is its axis of rotation, what it’s spinning around. Unlike the basketball, the Earth is not spinning around an axis straight up and down, its axis is tilted to the side, 23.5o. This tilt points the North Pole of Earth right at the North Star, Polaris. The North Pole is always pointing to that spot in space no matter where it is in its orbit around the sun.

This tilt is why we have seasons and why the sub-solar point moves north and south through the year. As Earth moves through its orbit around the Sun, the North Pole is still always pointed at the North Star. This means that on the June solstice, when the Sun is directly overhead at the Tropic of Cancer (23.5o north), the North Pole is tilted toward the Sun, the Northern Hemisphere experiences Summer, and it is warmer due to more direct sunlight. At the same time, the Southern Hemisphere is tilted away from the Sun, experiencing Winter and cooler weather because of less direct sunlight. The opposite is true six months later on the December solstice, when the Sun is directly overhead at the Tropic of Capricorn (23.5o south). At the Equinoxes in March and September, the North Pole is still pointing at the North Star, but neither toward nor away from the Sun which is directly overhead at the Equator.

In Honolulu, the Sky Gate sculpture near Honolulu Hale is a large curvy ring held up by four angled supports. Most of the year it casts an odd shadow of a curvy line on the ground outside the ring itself. During lāhainā noon though, with the sun directly overhead it casts a shadow directly below it of a perfect ring around the raised platform on the ground in the middle. Check it out around 12:30 p.m. in late May or mid-July. The J. Watumull Planetarium at Bishop Museum posts the dates for lāhainā noon  on our Astronomy Resources page www.bishopmuseum.org/astronomy-resources.

7 Responses

  1. Can you tell me when the sun will be directly 90° above Fort Myers Florida?
    Perhaps more importantly how can a person determine what day and time of day The sun will be directly above their location in any area between the two tropics?

    1. The sun is never directly overhead above Fort Myers, because Fort Myers is not in the tropics, i.e. latitude between the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn. No part of Florida is in the tropics. The only U.S. state in the tropics is Hawaii.

    2. This is an excellent question, Leon. Mahalo for asking! We’ve gone ahead and updated the text to address all of the correct replies to your original thread.

  2. The first sentence is false. It should say “for locations in Hawaii,” not “for locations on Earth in the tropics.” As the article correctly points out, for locations on the Equator, the sun is overhead on the equinox in March and the equinox in September, not in May and July. The dates when the sun is overhead depend on the latitude, and for latitudes in Hawaii, the dates happen to fall in May and July, but that is not true of other latitudes within the tropics.

    1. Absolutely Larry. Mahalo for pointing out the misleading information, we’ve updated the text :).

  3. I would like to look through my old photos taken in Hawaii to determine if any of them were taken during lāhainā noon. I’ve looked for the approximate dates and given cloud cover and things that cast difficult shadows (such as trees) it’s difficult to tell if any were actually taken at that time. Is there some sort of historical resource available where I could go back and see for a particular island what the dates and times were for that year? As long as it goes back at least 20 years I would be happy, although I’m sure some people have older pictures than I that would be fun to see if a lāhainā noon could be spotted in them. Mahalo!

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