Frost is miscast as a friendly line in the calendar that guarantees gentle days ahead. In reality, the first white crust on lawns appears only after solar geometry has already swung hard toward darkness, trimming daylight and lowering the sun’s angle so much that the surface energy budget turns negative over long nights.
This clash between story and physics is no minor quirk; it is baked into how bodies on Earth store and release heat. Oceans and soils carry high heat capacity and thermal inertia, so they keep feeding warmth into the lower troposphere even after top‑of‑atmosphere insolation has dropped and net longwave radiation from the ground to space dominates on clear nights, conditions that favor radiative cooling and frost formation.
Folk sayings latch onto the lag. People feel sun on a sheltered wall or a still field and conclude that frost has somehow locked in a pleasant plateau, when what they are actually sampling is residual heat leaking out of water, rock, and vegetation while the incoming shortwave flux has already fallen below the level that can sustain it. Warm afternoons persist, yes. Nights, freed from high solar input and often coupled with drier air and weaker turbulent mixing, cool faster, not slower, once that first frost appears.