Dhuhr has been defined in several ways in the fiqh literature:
The first and the second definitions are equivalent, as the shadow length has a direct correlation to the Sun's elevation in the sky via the following formula:
Shadow Length = Object Height × cot(Sun Angle).
The Sun's angle is a continuous function over time and has only one peak point (the point at which the tangent to its curve has zero slope) which is realized exactly at midday. Therefore, according to the first two definitions, Dhuhr begins immediately after the midday.
The third definition is slightly different from the previous two definitions. According to this definition, Sun must passes its zenith line before Dhuhr starts. We need the following information to calculate this time:
Having r and d, the time t needed for Sun to pass its zenith line can be computed using the following formula:
t = arctan(r/d) / 2π × 24 × 60 × 60.
The maximum value obtained by the above formula (which corresponds to the minimum Sun-Earth distance) is 65.0 seconds. Therefore, it takes approximately 1 minute until Sun's disk comes out of its zenith that should be considered into consideration for calculating Dhuhr, if the third definition is used.
There are three definitions for the Dhuhr time as described above. According to the first two definitions, Dhuhr = midday, and according to the third definition, Dhuhr = midday + 65 seconds.