Candle Lighting Times
I have used hebcal for decades on GNU/Linux and also on thunderbird. It has been accurate and rock solid. I decided I needed to update the thunderbird calander and the new calander, both as generated on the website and the download is off on candlighting time by about 3 minutes, and Havdalah, I have really no idea what is happening. The commandline seems correct to 72 minutes 7/31/2020 Candle lighting: 7:53 8/1/2020 Shabbat Nachamu 8/1/2020 Havdalah (72 min): 9:22 8/5/2020 Tu B'Av Website: Shabbat Times Brooklyn, New York, USA Candle lighting: 7:55pm on Friday, 31 July 2020 Shabbat Nachamu occurs on Saturday, 1 August 2020 This week's Torah portion is Parashat Vaetchanan Havdalah (72 min): 9:24pm on Saturday, 1 August 2020 Tu B'Av occurs on Wednesday, 5 August 2020 City Havdalah nightfall (tzeit hakochavim) ℹ️ minutes past sundown ℹ️ I had to set it to 72 minutes, FWIW I see a notwe about the website about making an adjustment to the Shabbat times. I think its not fixed :( This is the OU data Friday: Alos 4:15 A Talis 4:55 A Sunrise 5:52 A Sof Zman Shema MA 8:38 A Sof Zman Shema GRA 9:27 A Sof Zman Tefila MA 10:06 A Sof Zman Tefila GRA 10:38 A Chatzos 1:01 P Mincha Gedola 1:37 P Mincha Ketana 5:12 P Plag Mincha 6:42 P Candle Lighting 7:53 P Sunset 8:11 P Tzeis 42 Minutes 8:53 P Tzeis 72 Minutes 9:23 P DAILY LEARNING Times To Note Candle Lighting at 7:53 P Havdalah Tomorrow at 8:52 P Events Saturday: Alos 4:16 A Talis 4:56 A Sunrise 5:53 A Sof Zman Shema MA 8:39 A Sof Zman Shema GRA 9:27 A Sof Zman Tefila MA 10:06 A Sof Zman Tefila GRA 10:38 A Chatzos 1:01 P Mincha Gedola 1:37 P Mincha Ketana 5:11 P Plag Mincha 6:41 P Sunset 8:10 P Havdalah 8:52 P Tzeis 42 Minutes 8:52 P Tzeis 72 Minutes 9:22 P Parsha Va'etchanan DAILY LEARNING Times To Note Havdalah at 8:52 P Events -- So many immigrant groups have swept through our town that Brooklyn, like Atlantis, reaches mythological proportions in the mind of the world - RI Safir 1998 http://www.mrbrklyn.com DRM is THEFT - We are the STAKEHOLDERS - RI Safir 2002 http://www.nylxs.com - Leadership Development in Free Software http://www.brooklyn-living.com Being so tracked is for FARM ANIMALS and extermination camps, but incompatible with living as a free human being. -RI Safir 2013
Answer
Another update: after a bunch of research, we've come to the conclusion that the sunset algorithm we were using in the JavaScript version of Hebcal wasn't accurate enough. As of today, we have swapped it out for a version that although less-commonly used in the JS world, seems to match both the previous C version and most other sources.
Some of the Hebcal event feeds are cached up to 1 week, so subscriptions on Google Calendar, iPhone, etc might not refresh until next Sunday.
https://www.hebcal.com/shabbat?geonameid=5110302&M=off&m=72
Shabbat Times Brooklyn, New York, USA
- Rosh Chodesh Elul occurs on Thursday, 20 August 2020
- Rosh Chodesh Elul occurs on Friday, 21 August 2020
- Candle lighting: 7:26pm on Friday, 21 August 2020
- This week's Torah portion is Parashat Shoftim
- Havdalah (72 min): 8:55pm on Saturday, 22 August 2020
./hebcal -c --latitude 40,39 --longitude 73,56 --timezone America/New_York -m 72 | grep --context=2 '8/22/2020'
8/21/2020 Rosh Chodesh Elul
8/21/2020 Candle lighting: 7:26
8/22/2020 Havdalah (72 min): 8:55
8/28/2020 Candle lighting: 7:15
8/29/2020 Havdalah (72 min): 8:44
Update: we've ported the "round Havdalah times up to nearest minute" feature back to C. It's available in hebcal 4.21 and later.
./hebcal --version
Hebcal version 4.21
./hebcal -c --latitude 40,39 --longitude 73,56 --timezone America/New_York -m 72 | grep --context=2 '8/1/2020'
7/30/2020 Tish'a B'Av
7/31/2020 Candle lighting: 7:53
8/1/2020 Shabbat Nachamu
8/1/2020 Havdalah (72 min): 9:23
8/5/2020 Tu B'Av
8/7/2020 Candle lighting: 7:45
Hi, thanks for using Hebcal.
One of the features of the new website is that it offers a radio button for Havdalah with two choices - tzeit or fixed minutes. The new default is Tzeit HaKochavim (solar depression of 8.5 degrees) vs. a fixed number of minutes (e.g. 72) after sunset, because it works more consistently across the globe.
Tzeit doesn't apply here, because it looks like in this case you're specifically choosing 72 minutes.
There are 3 things that could account for 1-2 minute differences in candle lighting and Havdalah times:
1. slightly different NOAA sunset calculators - the one we're using on the website now is implemented in JS. It was previously implemented in C. Both use double-precision floating point arithmetic, but there are so many constants and opportunities to round/truncate that there could be slight differences in the resulting number.
2. In JS, we truncate candle-lighting (Friday) times down to the nearest minute, and round Havdalah times up to the nearest minute. The idea here is that it's better to list candle-lighting time as 30 seconds earlier than strictly necessary, and for Havdalah it's better to wait an additional 30 seconds to end Shabbat/yontiff. So if the exact candle lighting time from the sunset engine (including seconds) was at 20:02:31 or even 20:02:59, we have always returned candle-lighting at 20:02 in both C and JavaScript. However, in JS we're operating a little differently for Havdalah times only. If the Havdalah calculation comes back as 21:17:29, JS will display 21:17, but if it were 21:17:30 through 21:17:59 we display 21:18. In the C version, we would display 21:17 for Havdalah even if the engine returned 21:17:59. Should we consider this a bug in the C version and backport the rounding feature to C? It's a 1- or 2-line code change.
3. Lastly, when comparing Hebcal to other sources like OU and Chabbad, most of the differences are explained by slightly different latitude/longitude definitions for a given city. Since 2013, Hebcal.com has been using lat/long definitions from GeoNames.org, which is available under a Creative Commons license. For the USA, we purchase a commercial ZIP code database from zip-codes.com.
In this particular case, it's likely that 1 minute of the 2-minute difference is accounted for reason #1, and the other minute is accounted for by reason #2.
Customer support service by UserEcho
Another update: after a bunch of research, we've come to the conclusion that the sunset algorithm we were using in the JavaScript version of Hebcal wasn't accurate enough. As of today, we have swapped it out for a version that although less-commonly used in the JS world, seems to match both the previous C version and most other sources.
Some of the Hebcal event feeds are cached up to 1 week, so subscriptions on Google Calendar, iPhone, etc might not refresh until next Sunday.
https://www.hebcal.com/shabbat?geonameid=5110302&M=off&m=72
Shabbat Times Brooklyn, New York, USA
./hebcal -c --latitude 40,39 --longitude 73,56 --timezone America/New_York -m 72 | grep --context=2 '8/22/2020'
8/21/2020 Rosh Chodesh Elul
8/21/2020 Candle lighting: 7:26
8/22/2020 Havdalah (72 min): 8:55
8/28/2020 Candle lighting: 7:15
8/29/2020 Havdalah (72 min): 8:44