Celestial Navigation Theoryyyy
Zone Time
Time referenced to the observers central meridian
Inferior conjunction
When an inferior planet is between the Earth and the Sun
Latitude scale
______ is used as the standard reference along which distances can be measured on a Mercator chart
Parallel of Latitude
a circle ( or approximation) on the surface of the earth, parallel to the equator and connecting points of equal latitude
Vertical Circle
a great circle of the c.s. through the zenith and nadir. perpendicular to the horizon
Celestial Merdian
a great circle of the celestial sphere, through the celestial poles and the zenith. usually refers to the upper branch, coincides w/ the hour circle through the zenith and vertical circle through the elevated pole.
Meridian
a north-south reference line, particularly a great circle through the geographical poles of earth. divided into two branches, upper and lower
Latitude
a star is observed at lower transit. the line of position derived from this sight gives you a check on your _____
Altitude
angular distance about the horizon; the arc of a vertical circle between the horizon and a point on the c.s. measured upward from horizon. distance below horizon is called negative altitude/depression
Meridian Angle (t)
angular distance east or west of the local celestial meridian; the arc of the celestial equator between the upper branch of the local cm and the hour circle of a celestial body measured east/westward from the local cm through 180*
Polar distance
angular distance from a celestial pole; the arc of an hour circle between a celestial pole, usually the elevated pole and a pt on the c.s., measured from the celestial pole through 180*
Latitude
angular distance from a primary great circle of plane. terrestrial latitude is the angular distance from equator measured northward or southward through 90*
Greenwich Hour Angle
angular distance west of the greenwich c.m.; the arc of the c.e. between the upper branch of the greenwich c.m. and hour circle. measured westward from greenwich c.m. through 360*
Sidereal Hour Angle
angular distance west of the vernal equinox; the arc of the ce of the angle at the celestial pole between the hour angle of the vernal equinox and the hour circle. measured westward through 360*. the angular distance east of the vernal equinox through 24 hrs
Ecliptic
apparent annual path of sun eastward across the c.s. -great circle inclined 23* 27'
Geoidal Horizon
assuming observers eye level is at the surface of the Earth
Observed Altitude (Ho)
corrected sextant altitude; angular distance of the center of a celestial body above the celestial horizon of the observer, measured along a vertical circle from 0 to 90 degrees.
circumpolar
if a body can be seen both at upper transit and at lower transit the body is referred to as ______
False
in general, the most effective period for observing stars and planets occurs during the lighter limit of civil twilight
Nutation
irregulated in the precessional motion due to the disturbing effect of other celestial bodies, (moons precession is 18.6 yrs, nodal period)
Azimuth Angle (Z)
measured either clockwise or counterclockwise through 180* starting at north point of the horizon in northern latitude and the south point of the horizon in the southern latitude
Co-altitude (zenith distance)
ninety degrees minus the altitude
Co-latitude
ninety degrees minus the latitude, the angle between the polar axis and the radius vector locating a point
Retrograde motion
occurs when a planet appears to move backwards in the sky
Hour Circle (circle of declination)
on the celestial sphere, a great circle through the celestial poles.
meridian angle parallactic angle
one angle of the Celestial Triangle is Azimuth Angle. what are the the other two angles?
Geographic position and elevated pole
one vertex of the navigation triangle is located at the assumed position. what are the other two vertices?
Inferior planets
orbits of planets smaller than that of earth (mercury and venus) cannot reach opposition or quadrature
Twilights
period between when the sun disappears and darkness, allows brightest star to be seen along with horizon
Celestial Horizon
plane that is perpendicular to zenith/nadir through Earth's equator
Geometric Horizon
solely based on the observers height of eye (refraction is accounted for)
False
the GHA of a star increases at a rate of approximately 4* per hour
False
the GHA of the moon increases at a rate of approximately 12.2* per hour
GHA and declination
the GP of a body is determined from what two pieces of information__________
0*
the SHA of the Arcturus changes at about _____ per hour.
Sextant Altitude (Hs)
the altitude measured by the sextant BEFORE CORRECTIONS are applied
diurnal circle
the celestial path that a celestial body makes each day across the sky (parallel of declination
Elevated pole
the celestial pole above the horizon, agreeing in name with the latitude. the celestial pole below the horizon is called depressed pole
6080 60nm
the conversion factor commonly used in marine navigation to convert degrees of latitude into distance is 1' of arc = _____, or 1* of arc = _____
Zd and Zn
the direction and distance of the GP of cel. body from your position is determined by ______
Intercept
the distance in miles between the circle of equal altitude for the observed altitude (ho) and the circle of equal altitude for computed altitude (Hc) is called the _____
great circle curved straight
the intersection of the earth and a plane that passes through its center and divides it into two hemispheres is called a _____. if not perpendicular to the equator, it appears as a ______ line on a mercator chart, and as a _____ straight line on a gnomonic chart
50
the lunar day is about ____ minutes longer than the solar day
cel meridian hour circle
the meridian angle for a body is measured from the ____ to the ____ of the body
Sensible Horizon
the plane perpendicular to the zenith/nadir axis that passes through observers eye
First Point of Aries (vernal equinox)
the point of intersection of the ecliptic and the c.e., occupied by the sun as it changes from south to north declination on or about March 21st. the instant the sun reaches the point of 0 declination when crossing the c.e. from south to north. origin for measuring the SHA
False
the sidereal day is about 4 minutes longer than the solar day
Conjunction
the sun and a planet are on the same side
Principal vertical circle
the vertical circle passing through the north and south celestial poles. coincides with the celestial meridian
Azimuth (LOP) Compass Error Stars
what is the navigation triangle used for?
Quadrature
when a superior planet forms a right angle with the sun and earth
Superior conjunction
when a superior planet is behind the sun
Local Apparent Noon
when the apparent(true) sun is over the upper branch of the observers meridian
090*/290*
you wish to observe a cel. body to obtain a check on your long.. to be so the body have a true bearing
True Azimuth
Azimuth relative to true north. angle at the zenith measured clock-wise from true-north to the vertical circle passing through the body measured 0* through 360*
Opposition
Opposite sides in orbit
Longitude
angular distance along a primary great circle, from the adopted reference point. terrestrial longitude is the arc of a parallel, or the angle at the pole
Geographic position of Celestial body
the point on the earth at which a given celestial body is in the zenith at a specified time.
Equator
the primary great circle of a sphere, perpendicular to the polar axis, or a line. Terrestrial equator is 90* from the Earths terrestrial poles
Equinoctial (celestial equator)
the primary great circle of the celestial sphere, every 90* from the celestial poles; the intersection of the extended plane of the equator and the celestial sphere
Precession
the result of gravitational forces exerted principally by the sun and moon on earths equatorial bulge
Apparent Altitude (Ha)
the sextant altitude corrected for INACCURACIES IN THE INSTRUMENT and HEIGHT OF EYE
Prime vertical circle
the vertical circle perpendicular to the principal vertical circle. passes through the east and west points of horizon
Elevated pole Geographic pole Assumed position
three vertexes of the navigation triangle
True
when the elongation of Venus is maximum the planet is at the quadrature
Rotation
-body spinning around its axis. gives the affect of rising and setting bodies. -earth rotates from west to east, tilted 23.4*. -sun rises until it crosses the meridian at which it begins to set. -sets until it crosses the lower branch meridian at which it begins to rise. -causes apparent motion, sidereal day (23hrs 56min 4sec), and diurnal paths, counterclockwise motion from north pole -stars appear to shift 1* west per day as earth moves 1* east
Solstice
-when the earth and sun are farthest apart -december/winter: vertical rays are 23.5*S lat, on the 21st/22nd, tropic of capricorn, first day winter, hemisphere tilted away from sun -june/summer: vertical rays are 23.5* N lat, on the 21st/22nd, tropic of caner, hemisphere tilted toward sun
Equinoxes
-when the earth is the closest to the sun (September and march) - autumn/fall: suns rays are along the equator moving north to south, sept 22/23, axis not tilted -spring/ vernal: suns rays are along equator moving south to north, march 21/22, axis is not tilted
Declination
A measure of how far north or south an object is from the celestial equator
Visible Horizon
Height of observers eye (apparent line where sky and Earth appear to meet)
True Azimuth Azimuth Principal Vertical
In the horizon coordinate system, the altitude and the _____ of a body delineate its position. The _____ angle at the zenith of the observer is the smallest angle between the observer's _____ vertical circle and the _____ circle passing through the body.
Superior planets
Planets farther from the sun than the earth (Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune)
Sexy Gorillas Can Violate George
Sensible Geoidal Celestial Visible Geometric
Tidal Cycles
Solar 12hrs Lunar 12hrs 25min Tropical month 27.33 days Anomalistic month 27.5 days
Primer Meridian
The 0* meridian of longitude, the greenwich england is almost universally used for this
Local Hour Angle
Angular distance west of the local c.m.; the arc of the c.e. between the upper branch of the local c.m. and hour circle. measured through 360*. At longitude 0* called GHA LHA= GHA +/- long.
True
A star is observed at lower transit. the line of position derived from the sight gives you a check on your latitude
Zenith Distance
Angular distance from the zenith or arc of vertical circle between the zenith and point of c.s. measured along vertical circle from 0* through 90*
