Coordinates - Time
Coordinates - Time
Overview
- Time:
- Sidereal & Solar day
- Hour Angle, Local Time, Local Sidereal Time & time zones
- Sunset equation
- Coordinate astronomy:
- Right Ascension & Declination, Altitude & Azimuth
- Meridian, Ecliptic, Celestial Equator, Celestial
- Solstices, Equinox, 1st point of Aries, Earth’s tilt
- Spherical trigonometry & Great circles
- Asteroids and elevation
Minute and second of arc
All of you should be familiar with degrees, but what about arcminutes and
arcseconds?
Solar day: Time taken for the sun to reach the noon in the sky (1 to 3) [24h]
Over the course of one solar year, the additional rotation of a solar day is
accumulated to 360°, which is equivalent to the rotation of one sidereal day!
Thus, the length of a sidereal day is 23h 56min 4s and is 3min 56s shorter than a
solar day.
Solar vs Sidereal Day (IOAA 2011)
What would be the length of the solar and sidereal days, in the current time
measures (our solar hours, minutes and seconds), if the Earth would rotate in the
opposite direction, but with the same rotation speed?
Ans:
Now since the Earth is revolving clockwise instead, a solar day is shorter than a
sidereal day. The number of sidereal days remains constant.
Realise that the decrease in rotation of each solar day compared to the sidereal
day adds up to 360°
So there is one more solar day than the number of sidereal days in a year.
366.24 + 1 = 367.24 days
Local time: Time the region adopts, basically the time you use
everyday is the local time of Singapore
Ans: Since it is the summer solstice, the declination of the sun is +23.5°
Ans:
Dec 21/22
Since the time is 0000h, at noon, the sun will be observed with a RA of
6h+12h=18h. This corresponds to the RA of the sun at the winter solstice, so the
date is Dec 21/22
Alt solution
Taking March 21 as the Vernal Equinox
This can be used for other situations where the RA of the sun is not at a equinox
or solstice
Julian Day
The Julian Day (JD) is the count of the number of days elapsed since the start of the
current Julian Period (12:00 January 1, 4713 BC)
Each day starts counting from noon Universal Time, though other time scales can be
used as well.
The Julian day number (JDN) is the integer value of the Julian date rounded down.
Correction depends on the difference in the time taken for the light of the event to
reach the sun compared to Earth.
HJD = JD - r x cos(θ) / c
Important for the celestial coordinates as objects on the celestial sphere are
constantly changing position.
Any other number with the J prefix is calculated based on the number of Julian
years (not solar years) from J2000. Eg. J1900 is 100 Julian years before J2000
Differences in Betelgeuse's coordinates
Measured by observing distant stars, or rather, X-Ray sources like distant quasars
using the Very Long Baseline Interferometry.
Since the rotation of the Earth is slowing down due to tidal interactions with the
moon, a UT day becomes longer.
Time flows non-uniformly, and a UT1 second is longer than a International Atomic
Time (TAI) second
Differs from the UT1 as each second in the UTC is constant while a UT1 second is
irregular.
Leap seconds are added to UTC to ensure that the difference in time between
UT1 and UTC is ±0.9
It differs from the International Atomic Time (TAI), by 32.184 s. This offset is due to
historical reason when transitioning from the ephemeris time to TT
TT = TAI + 32.184 s
E.T. = T − TM
Ans:
Thus, adding the equation of time which varies from -14 minutes to +16 minutes to
the mean solar time gives the range of true solar time to be 10:54–11:24.
The Large Magellanic Cloud in Phuket (IOAA 2017)
The coordinates of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) are R.A. = 5h 24min and
Dec =-70°00’ . The latitude and longitude of Phuket are 7°53’ N and 98°24’ E,
respectively. What is the date when the LMC culminates at 9pm as seen from
Phuket in the same year? You may note that the Greenwich sidereal time, GST, at
00h UT 1st January is about 6h 43min, and Phuket follows UT+7 time zone.
My method:
Corrected time zone of Phuket = 98°24’/15° = 6h 33min 36s
Diff in Local Time Zone and the actual time zone = 7h - 6h 33min 36s = 26min 24s
Difference in LST from Jan 1st = 8h 50min 24s - 6h 43min = 2h 7min 24s
Number of days from Jan 1st = 2h 7min 24s / 3min 56s = 32.4 days
Thus the day that the LMC would culminate at 9pm is 2nd Feb
Alt method
Alt method aka actual ans:
Spherical Trigonometry
Great circles
The largest possible circle drawn around a
sphere
Cosine rule:
Variation:
Cotangent formulas
Useful to know:
Just a line (SAO 2018)
Canis Minor is a bright constellation seen in winter skies. Shown below is its two
brightest stars, Calculate the angular distance between the two stars. Do not
assume planar geometry.
c = 6.03°
Sin(90)/sin(c) = sin(A)/sin(5°14’)
A = 60.26°
X = 4.26°
Alt ans:
cos(x) = cos(90°-05°14’)cos(90°-8°17’) + sin(90°-
05°14’)sin(90°-8°17’)cos(3°)
X = 4.26°
Sunrise Equation
How do we find the time it takes for a star/the sun to rise/set given any latitude
and declination of the sun/star?
Φ is the latitude’
cos(90)=cos(90-ϕ)cos(90-δ) + sin(90-ϕ)sin(90-
δ)cos(ω)
Rearranging:
cos(ω)= - cos(90-ϕ)cos(90-δ)/sin(90-ϕ)sin(90-δ)
= - cot(90-ϕ)cot(90-δ)
= - tan(ϕ)tan(δ)
Corrections for sunrise equation
Note that some questions may require to take into account atmospheric refraction
or the disk of the sun.
Subbing in the other values you will get the hour angle of the sun/star when it sets
Adding/subtracting the hour angle to noon will give you the approximate
sunset/sunrise time
Derivation
Ans: The solar disc has a radius of 16’, and the atmospheric refraction allows us to
see 34’ below the horizon. So -16’ + -34’ = -50’ (altitude is negative)
cos𝐻=(sinα−sin𝜙sin𝛿)/cos𝜙cos𝛿
Altitude
cos𝐻=(sinα−sin𝜙sin𝛿)/cos𝜙cos𝛿
Since 𝛿 = 0,
sinα = cos𝐻cos𝜙
Additionally:
Since 𝛿 = 0,
sinA = sin𝐻/cosα
S = 2 x cotα x sin𝐻/cosα
sinα = cos(15x3)cos(38)
α = 33.863
S = 2.5m2
Elevation
The elevation also affects the sunset/sunrise
times.
At certain latitudes, some stars that previously never rose above the horizon would
suddenly become circumpolar.
At the poles:
At the equator:
+5° ≥ ϕ ≥ -5° ϕ ≠ 0°
Damavand Mountain (IOAA 2009)
The Damavand Mountain is located at the North part of Iran, in south coast of Caspian Sea.
Consider an observer standing on the Damavand mountaintop (latitude = 35◦57′ N; longitude
= 52◦6′ E; altitude 5.6 × 10^3 m from the mean sea level) and looking at the sky over the
Caspian Sea. What is the minimum declination for a star, to be seen marginally circumpolar
for this observer. Surface level of the Caspian Sea is approximately equal to the mean sea
level.
θ = 2.4°
a = 37906km
a
Sin(90+h)/(R+H) = Sin(ϕ-θ)/a [Sine rule]
Sin(90+h)=(R+H)Sin(ϕ-θ)/a
90+h=128.39°
h=38.4°
Analemma
Diagram showing the position of the sun
when observed at the same position and
mean solar time (hour angle of the sun +
12H) across the span of a year.
5° x 18 = 90°
90°/2 = 45°
Questions?