Northern hemisphere spring comes to an end and its summer begins at 12:17 CDT on 21 June as the sun reaches the
celestial coordinates of 23.5oN and 6 hours right ascension. With respect to the Earth's surface the sun is described as over the Tropic of
Cancer, 23.5oN of the Earth's equator. At this same time the sun is still within the boundaries of the constellation Taurus the Bull - but
just barely. Interestingly about 5 hours later the sun will move into the region of Gemini as it crosses the boundary between it and Taurus.
We know that it is the Earth's orbital motion around the sun giving rise to the sun's apparent eastward motion amongst the stars in the
background. This is how the sun reaches a celestial coordinate, how it ‘crosses’ the boundaries between constellations, or how it is ‘in‘ a
constellation.
What is perhaps not well known is what makes this all the more interesting. There is a very slow regular motion of the Earth, precession,
a motion of the Earth's axes of rotation that in a way resembles the wobbly motion a spinning top has as its spinning slows down. The
Earth, however, is not slowing down like the top! It is, however, this spinning motion due to precession that has shifted the location of
the solstice from Cancer through Gemini into Taurus over the course of the last few millennium. The name Tropic of Cancer was derived from
the time period when at this date the sun was within the boundaries of Cancer the Crab. The date is referred to as the summer solstice
(sol = sun; stice = standing over) and it was a reference to the point where the sun would get no higher in the sky. It was standing, in
a sense, over a certain latitude on the Earth's surface - The Tropic of Cancer, as well as within the constellation Cancer