
Do you think it is easier to balance an egg on end on the equinox than on other days of the year? Test it and see! The autumnal equinox (which is the first day of fall in the Northern Hemisphere) is Sept 22, 2008; 11:44:18 a.m. EDT. This is one of the two times during the year when the sun crosses the celestial equator and the spin axis of the Earth points 90 degrees away from the sun. Why should this affect your ability to balance an egg on end? The premise is that aligning the gravitational pull of the Sun with that from the center of the Earth should somehow make it easier to balance any object.
Test the Hypothesis Yourself
Take a carton of eggs and try balancing the eggs on end today. Can you stand any of them up (without resorting to tricks like putting salt under the eggs)? Can you stand eggs on their small ends as well as their large ends? Keep track of your results and repeat the process on the equinox. Do you note any differences? An easier hypothesis to test is: Eggs can only be balanced on-end on the equinox. If you can balance an egg today, you've disproven the hypothesis. It's that easy!
One thing I find neat about egg-balancing is that a balanced egg will hold its position until a vibration knocks it down. How long can you keep an egg standing?
Urban Legends: Balancing an Egg on the Equinox | Why Do Leaves Change Color in the Fall?


Comments
I tried this with my husband and we both managed to get the egg on stand on the wider end. It did however, take some time. We will keep trying and see if it gets any easier.
http://www.badastronomy.com
well I
I have been bussy so I hadn’t checked my email until today
SEPTEMBER 23rd!!!!
I really wanted to test hits out, when is the other day of the year that you can do this?