Weather
January To Bring More Daylight To VA: What To Know
Now that the winter solstice has come and gone, the amount of sunlight Virginians get in a day will start to rapidly increase.
Virginians tired of the shorter days that accompany winter are in for a bit of relief now that January has arrived.
Dec. 21 marked the winter solstice, or the shortest day of the year. On that day, most parts of Virginia clocked only 9 hours and 26 minutes of daylight.
Now that the solstice has come and gone, the amount of sunlight we get in a day will start to rapidly increase, with some parts of the United States gaining more than an hour by month’s end, according to a new AccuWeather report.
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"Since the solstice, daylight has been slowly increasing while nights have been shrinking," AccuWeather forecasters wrote. "In the days immediately following the solstice, the daily change was just a few seconds from day to day, but as January progresses, the shift becomes easier to notice."
According to AccuWeather, Virginia is expected to gain around 40 minutes of additional sunlight by the end of January. On Jan. 31, the sun is expected to set around 5:28 p.m. in Northern Virginia.
Find out what's happening in Manassasfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Nationally, on Jan. 31, much of the southern United States will see 20 to 30 minutes more daylight compared to the first day of the month.
The change is more dramatic farther north. Across large parts of the northern United States, January's final day will contain more than an hour of additional daylight compared to the first day of the month.
Looking ahead, days will continue to get longer through the spring equinox on March 20. The equinox marks the turning point when daylight begins to win out over darkness, according to The Farmers' Almanac.
On the equinox, the direct rays of the sun are shining down on the equator, producing the effect of equal day and night, give or take a few minutes. This means that on the equinox, day and night are equal to exactly 12 hours all over the world.
After the equinox, the direct rays of the sun migrate north of the equator, with hours of daylight steadily growing longer until the summer solstice. After the summer solstice, the direct rays proceed to head south and days begin to grow shorter.
While the days are growing longer, that doesn't necessarily mean temperatures will go up.
"The sun remains low in the sky, and its angle is still too weak to deliver much warmth," AccuWeather forecasters wrote. "But as daylight continues to increase in the months ahead, the sun will climb higher overhead, gradually boosting temperatures and signaling the slow march toward spring."
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