On
Earth, the terminator is a circle that divides the Earth approximately in half. The terminator passes through any point on Earth's surface twice a day, at
sunrise and at
sunset, apart from
polar regions where this only occurs when the point is not experiencing
midnight sun or
polar night. The circle separates the portion of Earth experiencing daylight from that experiencing darkness (night). While a little over one half of Earth is illuminated at any point in time (with exceptions during
eclipses), the terminator path varies by time of day due to
Earth's rotation on its axis. The terminator path also varies by time of year due to
Earth's orbital revolution around the Sun; thus, the plane of the terminator is nearly parallel to planes created by lines of
longitude during the
equinoxes, and its maximum angle is approximately 23.5° to the
pole during the
solstices.
Surface transit speed as it approaches the terminator. At the
equator, under flat conditions (without obstructions like mountains or at a height above any such obstructions), the terminator moves at approximately . This speed can appear to increase when near obstructions, such as the height of a mountain, as the shadow of the obstruction will be cast over the ground in advance of the terminator along a flat landscape. The speed of the terminator decreases as it approaches the poles, where it can reach a speed of zero (full-day sunlight or darkness).
Supersonic aircraft like
jet fighters or
Concorde and
Tupolev Tu-144 supersonic transports are the only aircraft able to overtake the maximum speed of the terminator at the equator. However, slower vehicles can overtake the terminator at higher
latitudes, and it is possible to walk faster than the terminator at the poles, near to the
equinoxes. The visual effect is that of seeing the sun rise in the west, or set in the east.
Grey-line radio propagation Strength of
radio propagation changes between day- and night-side of the
ionosphere. This is primarily because the
D layer, which absorbs
high frequency signals, disappears rapidly on the dark side of the terminator, whereas
the E and
F layers above the
D layer take longer to form. This time-difference puts the
ionosphere into a unique intermediate state along the terminator, called the "grey line".
Amateur radio operators take advantage of conditions along the terminator to perform long-distance communications. Called "gray-line" or "grey-line"
propagation, this signal path is a type of
skywave propagation. Under good conditions, radio waves can travel along the terminator to
antipodal points. ==Gallery==