Longest day: 17h 56m | Shortest day: 6h 40m
Monday, April 20, 2026
Next solar event in Tyumen: Summer Solstice on Sunday, June 21, 2026. On that day, sunrise is at 03:42, sunset at 21:38, with 17h 56m of daylight. The longest day of 2026 in Tyumen has 17h 56m of daylight (summer solstice), while the shortest day has 6h 40m (winter solstice).
| Event | Date | Sunrise | Sunset | Daylight |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spring Equinox | Mar 20, 2026 | 06:42 | 18:50 | 12h 09m |
| Summer Solstice | Jun 21, 2026 | 03:42 | 21:38 | 17h 56m |
| Fall Equinox | Sep 22, 2026 | 06:23 | 18:40 | 12h 18m |
| Winter Solstice | Dec 21, 2026 | 09:16 | 15:57 | 6h 40m |
Solstices and equinoxes are the four key astronomical events that define the seasons. They are determined by Earth's axial tilt of approximately 23.4 degrees relative to its orbital plane around the Sun. In Tyumen, located at latitude 57.2° Northern in Russia, these events produce measurable changes in daylight duration, sunrise and sunset times, and the Sun's maximum altitude above the horizon.
The two solstices mark the extremes: the summer solstice is the longest day of the year, and the winter solstice is the shortest. The two equinoxes mark the midpoints, when day and night are approximately equal in length. Together, these four dates divide the year into the astronomical seasons observed in Tyumen.
In 2026, the difference between the longest and shortest days in Tyumen is 11h 16m. This range is directly proportional to latitude: cities near the equator see almost no variation, while cities at high latitudes (above 60 degrees) can experience differences exceeding 12 hours between solstices.
The June solstice is the longest day of the year in Tyumen. In 2026, it falls on Sunday, June 21, 2026. On this day, the Sun rises at 03:42 and sets at 21:38, providing 17h 56m of daylight.
At Tyumen's latitude of 57.2°, the Sun reaches its highest point in the sky on this date, climbing to approximately 56.2° above the horizon at solar noon. This high solar angle means sunlight strikes the ground more directly, producing stronger shadows at midday and longer twilight periods in the morning and evening.
The extended daylight on the summer solstice affects daily life in Tyumen. Morning light arrives early, making it ideal for outdoor activities before the heat of the day. Evening light lingers well past typical dinner hours, extending the usable daylight for recreation, photography, and travel. Golden hour on the summer solstice is particularly long, as the Sun takes more time to traverse the low-angle portion of the sky near the horizon.
The December solstice is the shortest day of the year in Tyumen. In 2026, it falls on Monday, December 21, 2026. Sunrise occurs at 09:16 and sunset at 15:57, giving only 6h 40m of daylight.
On the winter solstice, the Sun reaches its lowest maximum altitude of approximately 9.4° above the horizon at solar noon in Tyumen. This low angle means sunlight passes through more atmosphere, producing weaker, more diffused light. Shadows are longer throughout the day, and the twilight periods (civil, nautical, and astronomical) are compressed.
Despite being the shortest day, the winter solstice marks the turning point after which days begin to lengthen. In the weeks following the winter solstice, Tyumen gains approximately 1 to 3 minutes of daylight per day (the rate depends on latitude and proximity to the equinox). By the spring equinox, daylight hours will have increased by roughly half the annual difference of 11h 16m.
The equinoxes occur around March 20 and September 22 each year. On these dates, the Sun crosses the celestial equator, and day and night are approximately equal in length everywhere on Earth. In Tyumen, the spring equinox on Friday, March 20, 2026 provides 12h 09m of daylight, while the fall equinox on Tuesday, September 22, 2026 provides 12h 18m.
The term "equinox" comes from the Latin words "aequus" (equal) and "nox" (night). While the concept suggests exactly 12 hours of day and 12 hours of night, the actual daylight on an equinox is slightly longer than 12 hours. This occurs because sunrise is defined as the moment the top edge of the Sun appears above the horizon, and sunset as the moment the top edge disappears. Additionally, atmospheric refraction bends sunlight around the curve of the Earth, making the Sun visible for several minutes before it geometrically rises and after it geometrically sets.
The spring equinox marks the beginning of the period when daylight hours exceed nighttime hours in Tyumen. From March through September (in the Northern Hemisphere), each day is longer than 12 hours. Conversely, the fall equinox signals the transition to shorter days, with nighttime exceeding daylight from September through March.
Tyumen's position at 57.2° Northern latitude gives it a high latitude, resulting in significant seasonal daylight variation. The annual difference between the longest and shortest days is 11h 16m, which influences everything from energy consumption patterns to outdoor activity schedules.
At this high latitude, the seasonal swing in daylight is pronounced. Summer days are long with early sunrises and late sunsets, while winter days are noticeably short. Residents of Tyumen experience significant changes in the Sun's arc across the sky between seasons. The golden hour and blue hour windows are considerably longer in winter (when the Sun moves at a shallow angle near the horizon) and shorter in summer (when the Sun rises and sets more steeply). This makes winter a particularly rewarding time for landscape and architectural photography in Tyumen.
Understanding these solar events helps with planning outdoor activities, photography sessions, travel itineraries, and energy usage in Tyumen. Gardeners and farmers use solstice and equinox dates to time planting and harvesting. Photographers plan shoots around the solstices to take advantage of extreme daylight conditions (very long golden hours in summer, dramatic low-angle light in winter). Travelers can use this data to choose the best time to visit Tyumen based on their preferred daylight conditions.
Today in Tyumen, sunrise is at 05:18 and sunset is at 19:57, providing 14h 39m of daylight. Compared to the extremes:
| Date | Sunrise | Sunset | Daylight | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Today | Apr 20 | 05:18 | 19:57 | 14h 39m |
| Longest day | Jun 21 | 03:42 | 21:38 | 17h 56m |
| Shortest day | Dec 21 | 09:16 | 15:57 | 6h 40m |
| Spring equinox | Mar 20 | 06:42 | 18:50 | 12h 09m |
| Fall equinox | Sep 22 | 06:23 | 18:40 | 12h 18m |
Between the winter solstice and the spring equinox, Tyumen gains daylight at an accelerating rate. The rate of change is slowest near the solstices (when the Sun's declination is changing direction) and fastest near the equinoxes (when the Sun crosses the equator). This means the most rapid day-to-day changes in sunrise and sunset times occur in March and September.
After the spring equinox, daylight continues to increase but at a decelerating rate, reaching its maximum at the summer solstice. The pattern then reverses: daylight decreases slowly at first, accelerates through the fall equinox, and decelerates again approaching the winter solstice. This sinusoidal pattern repeats every year and is consistent for all locations at the same latitude as Tyumen.
For practical purposes, the weeks around the equinoxes are when residents of Tyumennotice the most dramatic day-to-day changes. A few minutes of daylight gained or lost each day adds up quickly, with the total shift exceeding 2 to 4 minutes per day at mid-latitudes during equinox periods.