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Explore why a shadow changes its length and direction from sunrise to sunset — and what this tells us about Earth and the Sun.
At noon, you return to the same flagpole. This time, the shadow is much shorter and points in a slightly different direction — almost due north. You mark it again. After lunch, at 3:00 PM, you check one more time. Now the shadow is long again, but it stretches toward the east — the opposite direction from the morning!
The flagpole never moved. Nobody pushed it. Nobody changed its height. Yet its shadow changed in both length and direction throughout the day.
The flagpole phenomenon might seem mysterious at first, but scientists have understood its cause for centuries. The key idea is this: shadows change because Earth rotates on its axis, which makes the Sun appear to move across the sky. As the Sun's position changes, the angle of light hitting an object changes — and that changes the shadow.
Let's break this into the core science ideas you need to understand.
What scientists do: Scientists collect and analyze data about observable events. In this investigation, you will measure and record the length and direction of a shadow at regular intervals throughout a sunny day. This is the same practice that early astronomers used to track the Sun's apparent path across the sky.
Question: How does the length and direction of a shadow change from morning to afternoon?
Here is an example of what a student's data might look like after a full day of measurements:
| Time of Day | Shadow Length (cm) | Shadow Direction | Sun Position (Approx.) |
|---|---|---|---|
8:00 AM | 87 cm | West-Northwest | Low, in the East |
9:00 AM | 62 cm | West-Northwest | Rising higher |
10:00 AM | 44 cm | Northwest | Getting higher |
11:00 AM | 30 cm | North | Nearly overhead |
12:00 PM | 22 cm | North | Highest point |
1:00 PM | 28 cm | North-Northeast | Starting to lower |
2:00 PM | 42 cm | Northeast | Lower in the West |
3:00 PM | 60 cm | East-Northeast | Getting lower |
4:00 PM | 85 cm | East | Low, in the West |
When we look at the investigation data, two clear trends emerge. First, shadow length follows a predictable pattern: longest in the early morning, shrinking steadily until midday, then growing longer again into the late afternoon. Second, shadow direction shifts from roughly west in the morning to roughly east in the afternoon, sweeping through north around noon.
Both trends have the same root cause. Earth rotates from west to east, so the Sun appears to arc across the sky from east to west. In the morning, the Sun is low in the eastern sky, so its rays hit objects at a shallow angle, stretching shadows far toward the west. As Earth continues to rotate, the Sun climbs higher and higher until it reaches its highest point in the sky — called solar noon. At that moment, rays strike nearly straight down, producing the shortest shadow of the day. Then, as Earth keeps turning, the Sun appears to drop toward the western horizon, and shadows lengthen again — this time pointing east.
Notice that the morning and afternoon shadow lengths are nearly symmetrical. The shadow at 8:00 AM (87 cm) is almost the same as the shadow at 4:00 PM (85 cm). That symmetry happens because the Sun is at roughly equal angles above the horizon at those two times — it's just on opposite sides of the sky.
The diagram above shows the key relationship. The angle between the Sun's rays and the ground determines shadow length. A steep angle (near noon) makes a short shadow. A shallow angle (morning and evening) makes a long one. By collecting data on shadow length and direction throughout the day, we can map the Sun's apparent path without ever looking directly at the Sun — the shadows tell the whole story.
One of the most powerful tools in science is the ability to recognize patterns. Scientists look for patterns in data because patterns help us predict what will happen next and explain why things happen. The shadow data we collected reveals a very clear pattern: shadow length decreases during the morning, reaches a minimum around noon, and increases again in the afternoon. This is a repeating, predictable pattern — it happens the same way every single day.
But the pattern of daily shadow changes is not the only place in science where we see regular, repeating cycles caused by objects in space. Let's look at how this same crosscutting concept — patterns — shows up in other areas of science.
| Phenomenon | Pattern Observed | What Causes It |
|---|---|---|
| Daily shadow changes | Shadows are long→short→long every day; direction sweeps W→N→E | Earth's rotation changes the Sun's apparent position |
| Day and night cycle | Light and dark alternate in a regular 24-hour cycle | Earth's rotation — one side faces the Sun while the other faces away |
| Moon phases | Moon appears to change shape in a ~29.5 day cycle (new→full→new) | Moon's orbit around Earth changes how much sunlit surface we see |
| Seasonal star patterns | Different constellations are visible in different seasons, repeating yearly | Earth's orbit around the Sun shifts our nighttime view of space |
| Tides | Ocean water rises and falls roughly twice per day | Gravitational pull of the Moon and Sun on Earth's water |
Notice something all five phenomena share: they are cyclic patterns — they repeat over and over. They're all caused by the predictable motions of objects in space (Earth spinning, Earth orbiting the Sun, the Moon orbiting Earth). Once scientists identified these patterns, they could make accurate predictions — like what time the Sun will set tomorrow or when the next full moon will occur.
Understanding how shadows change throughout the day isn't just a fun science activity — it has been critically important to human civilization for thousands of years and remains valuable today.
Engineering connection: If you were asked to design the best placement for a school garden, you would need to collect shadow data in the schoolyard first. You'd measure which areas get the most direct sunlight and which are shaded by buildings at different times. This is exactly the kind of evidence-based problem-solving that engineers do every day — using data to make design decisions.