1. Introduction
Solar radiation works as the unifying force that shapes all physical and biological elements of the planet [
1,
2]. The climate system is initiated by solar heat [
3], while solar light fuels photosynthesis [
2,
3]. The annual cycle of solar declination is the primary factor driving the distribution of the Earth’s climatic zones [
3]. Small variations in solar irradiance scale climate responses globally [
4]. For instance, surface temperatures rise 0.1 °C when the solar irradiance increases 0.1% [
5]. The temperature of a site increases as the solar declination approaches the site’s latitude, and decreases as the solar declination departs from that latitude [
6].
In the sciences of energy, the global irradiance has usually been split into direct normal irradiance (DNI) and diffuse irradiance. DNI is defined as the radiation coming from the solar disk, received by a plate placed normal to the Sun [
7], which is measured within a solid angle of up to 20° centered in the solar disk [
7]. Because DNI can be assessed whenever a plate points to the Sun and wherever the Sun is visible, such a concept proves ineffective in explaining the latitudinal distribution of the Earth’s budget of solar radiation; hence, the present work introduces several definitions aimed to analyze the irradiance supplied to the planet at the local meridian.
Natural beam irradiance (
NBI) denotes the share of the global irradiance that occurs as a normal projection to the Earth’s surface when the solar disk (only 32 arcmin wide) occupies the local zenith. Unlike DNI,
NBI is exclusive to the subsolar point and can only occur between the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, while it does not consider solid angles beyond the angular size of the Sun.
Natural oblique irradiance (
NOI) denotes the share of the global irradiance that is supplied to a given site when the solar disk crosses the local meridian, but the solar declination lands elsewhere, so that
NOI always lands at angles below 90°, while it can only occur at solar noon.
NOI conforms to a line that pairs with the local meridian (where the center of such line holds
NBI) and spans the entire Earth across every longitude within a solar day (≈24 h), following the planet’s rotation. The angle at which
NOI lands depends on the angular distance between the latitude holding
NBI and the latitude where
NOI is recorded. The obliquity angle of
NOI remains unchanged for a given latitude throughout a solar day.
The angle at which the sunrays strike a site at the local meridian (NOI obliquity) fluctuates on a daily basis as a consequence of the annual cycle of solar declination. Every day, the Sun declination switches latitude, traveling the planet to a variable velocity. Conversely, the sunrays’ absolute perpendicularity and its inherent NBI occur at a particular latitude only twice within a Gregorian year: when the solar declination converges that latitude on its way south, and then northward. Nonetheless, it can involve several instances within a season when the velocity of the solar meridian declination promotes the overlapping of the sun-paths. However, even on the days of the sunrays’ perpendicularity, NBI occurs at a given longitude for merely 2.2 min, which is the time it takes for the apparent Sun to cross the local meridian from east to west: 15 arcdeg hour−1, or 2.2 min for 32 arcmin (angular size of the Sun).
If the Sun, whose diameter is 109 times larger than that of the Earth, can cast an
umbra of light on the subsolar point, the diameter of such
light umbra might be comparable to the lunar umbra that appears during an annular eclipse. The given comparison is valid because of the equivalence in the angular sizes of the Sun and the Moon [
8] as perceived from Earth. Despite the Sun’s diameter being 400 times larger than that of the Moon, it is located 388 times farther from Earth than the satellite. Moreover, when the equatorial circumference of the planet is divided by 360°, it yields 111.3 km arcdeg
−1, which derives in a diameter of 60 km for the
lumbra, given that the solar disk only covers 32 arcmin. The
great disparity in diameters between the solar disk (1.392 × 10
6 km) and the
lumbra (60 km) yields a ratio of 23,000:1. Accordingly, the bundle of sunrays that is normally projected from the Sun to the Earth takes the shape of a
cone of light, which extends from the solar disk to the
lumbra, and whose axis-vector extends from the center of the solar disk to the subsolar point.
That the
NBI is significantly higher at the subsolar point is supported by several facts. (1) If light travels on a straight path [
9], and a straight line is the shortest distance between two points (known facts), then the subsolar point is the closest spot to the Sun on the entire Earth [
10]. (2) The sunrays that are delivered perpendicularly to the Earth cross the atmosphere through its shortest dimension [
11], whereas the sunrays obliquely delivered interact with the atmosphere for tens of kilometers [
12]. Finally (3), the Sun and the
lumbra differ widely in diameters.
The Sun meridian declination defines the only latitude of the planet that receives the
light cone, the
lumbra, and therefore the
NBI, within a period of 24 h, despite the Sun illuminating and heating half the globe at a time. When the apparent Sun reaches the zenith in the visible sky, the sunrays strike the land and the ocean at a right angle (90°), accounting for the highest power density received by a site throughout the year. As the power density of the sunrays decreases on par with their obliquity [
13], the subsolar point [
10] holds the highest
NBI budget compared to any other site on the entire planet.
The Sun’s radius is 696,340 km; hence, the sunrays coming from its edge are emitted at an increased distance of 696,340 km compared to those coming from the Sun’s center (1.8 times the Earth–Moon distance). The sunrays from the center supply a higher concentration of heat and light to the Earth than those from the edge. The brightness of the solar disk declines from the core to the limb, while its temperature drastically drops beyond the chromosphere [
14]. Every solar path, whose angle of declination approaches a given latitude, comprises a significant share of the total irradiance that a site accumulates throughout the year [
7].
Because the sunrays can only reach normality at noon, the NBI must be assessed by means of the solar meridional declination. Assuming that the radiation intended for the Earth remains constant between two consecutive days (at a Sun–Earth distance of 1 UA), the budget of NBI can be assessed from the velocity of the Sun declination for the belt framed between the tropical parallels. The present work aimed to assess the budget of NBI for latitudes between the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, which has a close association with the budget of solar resources (heat and light) that every latitude can harness throughout the year. The working hypotheses are: (1) that the velocity and acceleration of the Sun meridian declination vary on par with the latitude of a site; (2) the velocity of solar meridian declination allows for an easy assessment of the annual budget of NBI for every latitude where NBI occurs; and (3) a known budget of NBI characterizes every particular range of latitude.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Data
Data for the Sun meridian declination (
) were generated from the geometric model of Spencer [
15] (Equation (2)), which is valid for any Gregorian year. The Spencer model takes ground on the fractional year (
), in radians (Equation (1)), where the time
is given as the day number within the year, from 1 to 365.
The velocity (
, arcmin day
−1) and acceleration (
, arcsec day
−2) of solar meridian declination (
, arcdeg) are the first- and second-order derivatives (Equations (3) and (4)) of the solar meridian declination (
). Given that the Spencer model yields
in radians, we switched the units of
,
, and
to arcdeg, arcmin day
−1, and arcsec day
−2, respectively, by adding the factors
,
and
to Equations (2)–(4), in the same order. The three factors were used only after assessing the derivatives for
and
. To assess the derivatives, we followed the chain rule; for instance, the derivative
was estimated by the product (
)
. The Equation of Time (
E) was assessed for a one-year period, following the geometric model of Spencer [
15] (Equation (5)). As
E is also produced in radians, we included the factor
[
4] in Equation (5), in order to convert first from rad to arcdeg, and then from arcdeg to minutes (of time).
2.2. Variables
The Sun meridian declination () was assessed for every day of two non-leap Gregorian years to best represent the cyclical nature of the Sun-declination dynamics. The angular velocity () and acceleration () of the solar meridian declination ( were estimated for the same two-year period. Assessing the angular velocity and acceleration requires defining in advance adequate units for distance and time. We used arcdeg and day as the most natural units for distance and time, respectively. The given decision answers the fact that the geometric model yields a unique record of solar meridian declination for every single day of a Gregorian year.
2.3. Defining Suitable Units
Before applying the factors 60 and 3600, both already included in Equations (3) and (4), the records of , and took place in the range of −23.5 to 23.5 arcdeg, −0.3896 to 0.3953 arcdeg day−1, and −0.0069 to 0.0078 arcdeg day−2, respectively. After applying the given factors, the records of the three parameters , , and fell in the range of 0 to 29; although the units were conveniently switched to arcdeg, arcmin day−1, and arcsec day−2, respectively.
Switching units served several purposes: (1) to avoid too small records lacking an integer component, (2) to represent the three parameters on a unified ordinate axis despite their differing dimensions, and (3) to illustrate the resemblance and associations between the functions , , and when plotted first against time (days within a year), and then against the E.
2.4. Declination Cycle
The meridian declination (), angular velocity (), and acceleration () of the apparent Sun were plotted against the Equation of Time (E); where E is defined as the difference between the mean time and the solar time and comprises the abscise of the Sun meridional analemma.
The signs were kept positive for every landing on the Northern Hemisphere, above the Equator (boreal spring and summer) as well as when corresponded to shifts of declination occurring between the Tropics of Capricorn and Cancer (boreal winter and spring), or when corresponded to records of landing in the Southern Hemisphere (boreal autumn and winter), or when the E occurred to the right of the local meridian.
The signs were kept negative for every landing on the Southern Hemisphere, below the Equator (boreal autumn and winter) as well as when corresponded to shifts of declination occurring between the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn (boreal summer and autumn), or when corresponded to records of landing in the Northern Hemisphere (boreal spring and summer), or when the E occurred to the left of the local meridian.
Before combining the data of the two hemispheres, let us define the net drive (or resultant drive) within the dynamics of solar meridian declination. An accelerative net drive (speeding up) occurs when the product () yields a positive sign, whereas a decelerative net drive (slowing down) occurs when the product () yields a negative sign. As a rule, a season becomes accelerative when the solar declination approaches the Equator, whereas it becomes decelerative when the solar declination approaches either Tropical Parallel.
All signs were disregarded and data from both hemispheres combined because the signs indicated the direction of the resultant drive rather than magnitude. The meridian declination, velocity, and acceleration of the Sun were plotted against the E, obtaining three analemma-like shapes in the very same chart.
2.5. Arbitrary Belts
Five latitudinal belts were arbitrarily proposed on each hemisphere, from the Equator to either the Tropic of Cancer or Capricorn. Four belts (denoted Equatorial, A, B, C) framed 5 arcdeg each, while the fifth (denoted Tropical) framed only 3.5 arcdeg. The last belt was intentionally thinner to emphasize the fact that the NBI is expected to last longer on this belt.
Data were assessed within hemisphere. Later, all belts with equivalent limits of latitude were averaged together, disregarding the current direction of the cycle of solar declination or the hemisphere to which they belonged, because every belt had a corresponding belt in the opposite hemisphere regarding the latitudinal range. For instance, two sections of the declination cycle spanned the arbitrary belt denoted A (5, 10) during spring (5, 10] and summer [10, 5), while two sections spanned the corresponding range of latitude on the opposing hemisphere during autumn (−5, −10] and winter [−10, −5).
2.6. Exposure and Resting Terms, and Budget of NBI
As the Sun meridian declination cycle spans the very same arbitrary belt twice a year, from north to south and then backward, two additional concepts are proposed. The
exposure term denotes the period on which an arbitrary belt holds
NBI, whereas the
resting term denotes the period on which an arbitrary belt lacks
NBI because the solar declination cycle occurs elsewhere. The daily
budget of NBI (
, Equation (6)) was assessed as the percentage of the Earth’s annual budget.
Equation (6) implies that every day within a Gregorian year, the planet receives 0.274% of its annual budget of
NBI, assuming that the daily budget remains constant between successive days at an average Sun–Earth distance of 1 AU. By fixing the Sun–Earth distance at 1 AU, we intentionally dismissed its role on the
NBI, which serves the purpose of isolating the effect of solar meridian declination as a key explanatory variable for the distribution of
NBI. The result of Equation (6) accounts for the relative value of a single sun-path among the 365 sun-paths occurring throughout the year. The relative budget of
NBI harnessed by an arbitrary belt (% arcdeg
−1) was assessed following Equation (7), where the exposure term is the number of days that the Sun lasts on every given belt.
As
is the vertical distance between two consecutive records of solar declination,
can be thought as the width of the belt on which the daily budget of
NBI (
) is distributed within a day. The accumulated budget of heat and light delivered to a particular arbitrary belt, as
NBI, varies in association with the
. The integrated budget of
NBI available for every latitude (% arcdeg
−1) was assessed for belts of size
and an
exposure term of a single day, which yielded Equation (8). Equation (8) incorporates the factor 60 in order to express the results as a budget of
NBI per arcdeg of latitude instead of arcmin.
4. Discussion
The structure of the information shown in
Figure 1,
Figure 2,
Figure 3,
Figure 4 and
Figure 5 depends on the units chosen for
and
. Likewise, approximating the diameter of the circular shapes
and
of Equations (9) and (10) (
Figure 2 and
Figure 3), respectively, can only be possible by scaling up the velocity and acceleration of the solar meridian declination by the factors 60 and 3600. The similarity in range between the three parameters of solar declination, once scaled up, implies that the actual velocity of solar meridian declination occurs at a rate of 1/60th, and the actual acceleration of solar meridian declination occurs at a rate of 1/3600th, both compared to the range in which
falls.
The variation found in , , and is typical of oscillatory pendular motion. The annual cycle of solar declination features two equilibrium points at the equinoxes and two resting points at the solstices. A trough of converges to a peak of at the solstices, where the Sun slows down, comes to a standstill, and then speeds up during the days preceding, the day at, and the days following a solstice, respectively. A trough of converges to a peak of at the Equator, where progressively decreases, reaches zero, and then progressively increases during the days before, the day at, and the days after an equinox, respectively. The apparent Sun progressively brakes during spring or autumn as it approaches a solstice, while it shows diminishing all through summer or winter.
The association between and fits a circumference, where spring, summer, autumn, and winter lie in the quadrants I, II, III, and IV of the circle , respectively. When signs are disregarded, varies in direct proportion to . Every range of latitude conforms to characteristic records of , , and . For example, the four instances of belt C showed comparable records of and , with only slight differences between hemispheres. Disregarding the signs, the dynamics of declination was equivalent between seasons whose resultant drive coincide (spring vs autumn; summer vs winter), whereas the three parameters , , and varied in reverse order between seasons whose resultant drive differed (spring vs. summer; autumn vs. winter).
According to the Sun meridian declination, every arbitrary belt holds NBI during two exposure terms within a year; both of equal length and each followed by a characteristic resting term. The first exposure term occurs when the Sun meridian declination spans an arbitrary belt on its way north, and the second term occurs when the solar declination spans the very same belt on its way south. For the Tropical belt, the two exposure terms merge into a unique exposure term, and the two resting terms merge into a unique resting term. Conversely, the two exposure terms of any belt centered at the Equator would have the same length, while the same holds true for the two resting terms.
For the average of both hemispheres, the belts A, B, C, and Tropical accumulated 1.1, 1.2, 1.5, and 3.6 times the budget of the Equatorial belt throughout the year (arcdeg−1). When was multiplied by the width of each arbitrary belt (arcdeg), the results yielded 6.9, 7.5, 8.2, 10.1, and 17.3% of the annual budget of NBI for the belts Equatorial, A, B, C, and Tropical, where the five percentages added up to 50%, and corresponded to the average exposure terms of 5.0, 5.5, 6.0, 7.4 and 18 sun-paths arcdeg−1, respectively.
The low of the Tropical belt guarantees a high budget of NBI, however irregularly supplied. The long exposure term of the Tropical belt also secures a high budget of NOI for latitudes beyond the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, which is provided at the lowest obliquity possible.
The highest temperatures on Earth fall on latitudes in the vicinity of the Tropics of Cancer or Capricorn during their
exposure to
NBI. A high temperature has been recorded for latitudes around the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn [
16] during their high
exposure terms to both
NBI and
NOI of low obliquity. In the Northern Hemisphere, ocean temperatures for latitudes ≥ 20° and depths from 0 to 50 m increase steadily throughout spring and summer, reaching their peak just before
NBI leaves the hemisphere (equinox); conversely, for the equatorial latitude to reach their peak temperatures, a heating cycle is required including near-perpendicular
NOI approaching
NBI, followed by
NBI itself, and finally near-perpendicular
NOI departing from
NBI [
17]. A different study found that temperatures were lower in the Southern Hemisphere, both on sea and land compared to those of the Northern Hemisphere [
18]. This disparity might be explained by the oceans’ ability to store heat, given the larger share of oceans in the Southern Hemisphere.
The high budget of
NBI of the
Tropical belt might be the cause of the location of the latitudinal deserts of the globe because most deserts occur near the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn. The location of altitudinal deserts may also be related to their budget of
NBI, because both landscapes and hill slopes may occur naturally “tilted to the Sun”. In high altitudes, the sunrays cross the atmosphere through a thinner, cooler, lighter, drier, and unpressured air-layer [
19]; therefore, the net radiation reaching the land might be higher compared to sites of low altitude. One previous work proposed that the deserts were originated by disturbances in the water cycle, induced by both natural causes and anthropogenic activities [
20].
The lowest NBI budget of the inter-tropics is seized by the Equator, however, this is compensated by a daily dosage of NOI of low obliquity (incidence angle above 66.5 arcdeg) along the year. Being at the center of the declination cycle, the Equator secures a constant budget of natural irradiance throughout the year. The number of solar paths delivering NOI to the Equator increases on par with the obliquity of their beam. The recorded in the Equatorial belt was 3.5 times higher than that of the Tropical belt, whereas the Tropical belt received a 3.6 higher budget of NBI than the Equatorial belt. Given the symmetry in the budget and distribution of NBI between hemispheres, every pair of sites matching latitudes, whether in the same or opposing hemispheres, has the potential to foster similar climates. Nonetheless, there were slight differences between hemispheres; for instance, the northern Tropical belt held 18.85 sun-paths arcdeg−1, whereas the southern only held 17.15 sun-paths.
The distribution and budget of
NBI may be associated to the location of both the ITCZ and the rainy belt [
21]. The contrasting temperatures occasioned by inter-seasonal variations in the obliquity of the sunrays might be associated with the occurrence of hurricanes, cyclones, and typhoons in both the
Tropical belts and latitudes surrounding them (15 to 30°) [
22].
Apart from solar declination, two factors promoted variations in the budget and distribution of
NBI across latitude. The first was the higher use-efficiency of the solar resources given by the reduction in the parallels’ length as the latitude increased. The spheric shape of the Earth yielded a lower linear velocity for any sun-path traveling across the longitude on a belt of higher latitude. The average within-day
term in which the
Equatorial, A, B, C, and
Tropical belts held
NBI was 0.5, 2.5, 5.5, 8.7 or 9% higher, respectively, compared to latitude zero. The second factor was the solar constant, whose variation was flawlessly synchronized with both the solar declination and the Earth’s revolution. The solar constant averaged 1361 Wm
−2 [
4], but applying the inverse law of light [
23] to the Sun–Earth distances along the year 2024 [
24], it ranged from 1316 to 1407 Wm
−2 (5 July and 3 January 2024, respectively), while its association with the solar declination followed Equation (11) (R
2 = 0.95,
p < 0.0001,
se of
= 0.02). Hence, the Southern Hemisphere holds a budget of
NBI that is 4.2% higher than that of the Northern.
The planet’s budget of NBI is unevenly distributed across latitude, which might bring new insights and applications in the fields of solar energy, but might also imply some long-term negative consequences for the environment. For instance, one-third of the planet’s budget of NBI lands on two thin belts, 3.5 arcdeg wide (20–23.5°), one on each hemisphere. To start with, these energy belts are bands of latitude where the harvest of solar energy might be highly efficient. Conversely, despite such enormous concentration of NBI guaranteeing a high budget of low-obliquity NOI for latitudes beyond the Tropics of Cancer or Capricorn, the inherent high dose of solar heat might play a key role explaining the growing desertification of the globe. The latter effect is aggravated by the absence of tree cover that already characterizes a large fraction of these energy belts (20 to 23.5°).