In pictures: Swimmers and hikers enjoy solstice

News imageBBC The sun is framed by two stones of Stonehenge which then reveal a strong ray of light. There are many people gathered watching the sunrise.BBC
Thousands gathered at Stonehenge in Wiltshire to watch the sunrise

Summer solstice is being celebrated across the northern hemisphere, marking the start of astronomical summer.

While we generally think of it as the whole day, it actually happens at a single moment when the hemisphere's pole is tilted at its maximum angle towards the Sun.

That exact time this year is Sunday 21 June at 09:24 BST.

Its significance is reflected at monuments and in rituals around the world.

We have selected some images from across the UK to mark the event.

News imageBBCWeatherWatcher/Daniel Rive The sun is bright orange as it rises over and is reflected in the sea. The sky is dark orange and a castle on an island is starkly black in silhouette. BBCWeatherWatcher/Daniel Rive
News imagePhil Maclean The sun is rising over a wheat field. There are people looking at the sun. The photo is full of a golden light.Phil Maclean

Sunrise brought a dramatic display of red and orange hues in St Martin, Jersey
More than 200 people took part in a solstice walk from The Valley Evesham to New Farm Nature Reserve in Worcestershire

The solstice always occurs between 20 and 22 June, though during a leap year it generally falls on 20 June.

The exact date shifts slightly each year because the Earth takes almost a quarter of a day longer to complete its orbit of the Sun than our calendar accounts for.

This discrepancy is why we add a leap day every four years – to keep the calendar aligned with Earth's orbit.

In English, the world solstice comes from the Latin word solstitium, meaning "sun standing still".

It seems to suggest a brief pause as the Sun reaches its most extreme point.

News imageThe women are wearing flowers in their hair, on their hats and around their necks as they stand in front of the sea at sunrise. The sky is coral with small grey clouds and there is a lighthouse on a harbour wall across the water behind them.
News imageFive women are in the sea smiling at the camera. Four of them are wearing fluorescent hats and all of them have floats. It is foggy. There are two men swimming and a rigid inflatable boat driving behind them.

Janet Burns, Linda Candlish, Trish Bromley and Gill Richardson from County Durham dressed up for the occasion at Roker Beach in Sunderland
Despite the fog, the Hornsea Mermaids made the most of an early dip