Updated
Updated · cronista.com · Jul 2
Earth Reaches 94.4 Million Miles From the Sun on July 6 as Northern Summer Peaks
Updated
Updated · cronista.com · Jul 2

Earth Reaches 94.4 Million Miles From the Sun on July 6 as Northern Summer Peaks

3 articles · Updated · cronista.com · Jul 2

Summary

  • July 6 at about 17:30 UTC marks Earth’s 2026 aphelion, when the planet will sit roughly 94.4 million miles, or 152.1 million km, from the Sun.
  • NASA says the event reflects Earth’s elliptical orbit, with aphelion only about 3 million miles farther than perihelion—roughly a 3% gap from the average Earth-Sun distance.
  • A 23.5-degree Axial tilt, not that extra distance, drives Northern Hemisphere summer by aiming more direct sunlight northward even as Earth is farthest from the Sun.
  • That same orbital geometry also slows Earth slightly near aphelion, helping make Northern Hemisphere summer the longest season; perihelion returns in early January at about 147 million km.

Insights

Why does our summer become the year's longest season when Earth is farthest from the Sun?
Earth receives 7% less solar energy this week. Why won't this cause a noticeable summer cool-down?