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Time and Temperature

Part 2: Fitting to Daylight Data

Rather than work with data sets with 365 elements, we give the data here for sunrise and sunset on the first day of each month. You will find this data in your worksheet, with minutes converted to fractions of an hour, and with time measured in months.

1997 Sunrise and Sunset,
Durham, NC
(all times EST)

Date Sunrise Sunset
Jan.1 07:26 17:13
Feb. 1 07:16 17:43
Mar. 1 06:46 18:11
Apr. 1 06:02 18:38
May 1 05:23 19:03
Jun. 1 05:00 19:27
Jul. 1 05:03 19:36
Aug. 1 05:23 19:20
Sep. 1 05:47 18:43
Oct. 1 06:11 17:59
Nov. 1 06:38 17:20
Dec. 1 07:08 17:02
  1. Compute the number of hours of daylight for the first day of each month. Make a scatter plot of this data.
  2. From Part 1, you have estimates of the coefficients A, B, C, and t0 of a function of the form

    h(t) = A + B sin [ C (t - t0)]

    that should fit this data. Refine these estimates if necessary -- now that you know some of the numbers -- and plot your sinusoidal function on the data. How good is the fit? Adjust the coefficients as necessary to make the fit as good as you can.
  3. Choose either the sunrise or sunset data, and find a sinusoidal approximation to the data. How good can you make the fit? Does this confirm or contradict your answer in Part 1 about which curves looked sinusoidal?
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Last modified: October 28, 1997