Reply To: Sundial at the Equator
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You are quite right. A traditional sundial will not work at the equator. During the summer months (spring equinox to fall equinox) the arc of the sun’s path will go to the north of you making shadows fall to the south and the opposite during the winter months. However, you can still make a modified sundial. Mount a pole vertically in the ground (or straw vertically on poster board). Each day its shadow will start as long to the west, gradually shorten to zero when the sun is directly overhead at solar noon, then gradually lengthen to the west. You can calibrate the length of shadow with cross lines for each hour. These hour lines should remain consistent throughout the year, although the sun will proceed to make a low arc south and north of directly overhead.
This will not permit the determination of north as described in the text. However, a line from the tip of the first morning shadow to the tip of the last evening shadow will be an almost perfect east-west line. A perpendicular line, of course, will be north and south. Thanks for the question. Please ask further.