Yeah, kinda.

I moved from Indiana to Norway - Trondheim, which is about in the middle of the length of Norway. During the summer, I can read outside at night even though the sun technically goes down for about 4 hours in June. It never gets darker than twilight. A few clouds means you might just have sunset all night. The sun does get surprisingly hot and very warming if we happen to have a sunny day. Jacket in the shade, short sleeves in the sun even though it is 18C/65F.

The reason for this is that the sun is at a low angle, so it hits more of your body than it does when the sun is overhead - like you'd get in Australia. This also means that while you need some sunscreen during the day - from about 10 to 5 - it doesn't burn as much. It is less intense in that way - but it just feels different.

During December, days are 4 hours of very weak light.

> The reason for this is that the sun is at a low angle, so it hits more of your body than it does when the sun is overhead - like you'd get in Australia. This also means that while you need some sunscreen during the day - from about 10 to 5 - it doesn't burn as much.

Not sure if I parse this correctly - I'd imagine you need more sunscreen at "low angles" due to more severe and longer exposure? Low angle -> more body surface area exposed directly at near-right angle to Sun -> more direct absorption -> more sunscreen needed?

I’ve found the UV index forecasts to generally be a good metric, so try looking at those for various locations. The main factor here is that the lower the sun is from the horizon, the more its light will be absorbed by the atmosphere due to the longer path. The maximum altitude that the sun will ever reach is (90° – (latitude – 23.4°)), so at the 60°-ish of Scandinavia it’s rarely more than 50° in the sky. It’s a very noticeable difference even in the summer. In my experience (born in southern Italy, pale-average, currently living in Sweden) it’s almost impossible for me to get sunburn in daily life in Sweden even without sunscreen. Definitely not so further south.

> it’s almost impossible for me to get sunburn in daily life in Sweden even without sunscreen.

Um most Swedes, even with not-super-pale skin get a sunburn every june. Just being outside in the sunshine for 2-3 hours without any protection and they turn "kräftröd" as they say.

No, because the sun at low angles passes so much atmosphere, that filters most out.

The exposure angle of your body also has a effect, but much weaker.

Today in Stockholm the UV index peaked at 6.3. And it is just a few days after the summer solstice, and the sky was largely clear today.

(Yet I can feel that I got slight sunburn being out for about 15 minutes today. So you still need to be careful.)

In winter the UV index might often peak at 1-2 on a clear day.

at lower angles the sun light needs to go through a much bigger "cross section" of atmosphere which greatly reduces its energy.

This is why noon sun is the most dangerous.

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Huh now I know why I never liked living in Washington and Oregon, especially at higher altitudes. The sun always felt hotter.

I summer in California and winter in Washington for that reason!

This low angle situation must have been experienced by every adult I imagine, its just about being outside before dawn and feeling how sun's warming effect on the body is much stronger than few hours ago even though air temperature itself might have been higher before.

Since it hits body more perpendicular its not rocket science, I realized this around age 10 myself and I am not the brightest in the pack.