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Finding your longitude The trickier part of celestial navigation
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Finding your longitude The trickier part of celestial navigation.

Dec 17, 2015

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Rodger Bennett
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Page 1: Finding your longitude The trickier part of celestial navigation.

Finding your longitude

The trickier part of celestial navigation

Page 2: Finding your longitude The trickier part of celestial navigation.

The problem of finding longitude at sea was particularly vexing

Page 3: Finding your longitude The trickier part of celestial navigation.

Latitude was easy

• Altitude of celestial pole

• Declination of a star at the zenith

• You can also use the sun, but you need to know the declination of the sun at the time

Page 4: Finding your longitude The trickier part of celestial navigation.

But latitude alone was not always enough

Page 5: Finding your longitude The trickier part of celestial navigation.

Longitude is harder

• Arbitrary starting point• Longitude 0 degrees

at Greenwich, England

Page 6: Finding your longitude The trickier part of celestial navigation.

Calculating your longitude

• You can use stars or you can use the Sun

• But in addition to making observations you need to know the time for some location of known longitude, local time alone is not enough

Page 7: Finding your longitude The trickier part of celestial navigation.

On Land One could observe Natural clocks

• Motion of the moon against the background of the stars

• Motions of the moons of Jupiter

• But these were hard to observe from a ship, although they could be observed from land

Page 8: Finding your longitude The trickier part of celestial navigation.

The problem of finding longitude at sea

• To the middle of the 18th century, no mechanical clock would keep accurate time in a sea-tossed ship

Page 9: Finding your longitude The trickier part of celestial navigation.
Page 10: Finding your longitude The trickier part of celestial navigation.

Odd Solutions

• Anchor a series of ships across the ocean that would shoot off flares and guns at set times

• Telepathic connection between animals on ship and those ashore

Page 11: Finding your longitude The trickier part of celestial navigation.

Harrison’s chronometer

• John Harrison (1693-1776) invented clocks that would keep good time at sea

Page 12: Finding your longitude The trickier part of celestial navigation.

Watch out for the difference between local time and local mean time

• The Equation of Time

Page 13: Finding your longitude The trickier part of celestial navigation.

Finding local time

• “Culmination” of the Sun at noon

• RA of a star on the meridian at a given time of night

• Let’s see how both ways would work

Page 14: Finding your longitude The trickier part of celestial navigation.

Sextant

Page 15: Finding your longitude The trickier part of celestial navigation.

Culmination of the Sun

• Set your chronometer to some known time, say Eastern Standard Time, before you set sail

Page 16: Finding your longitude The trickier part of celestial navigation.

Observe the time of local noon

• You see that the sun has transited the meridian – it is local noon

• Your chronometer reads 8 pm EST

• You make your correction for the equation of time (an important detail but one we won’t include in our calculation)

Page 17: Finding your longitude The trickier part of celestial navigation.

Getting the longitude

• Find the difference in times:

12 noon minus 8pm = 8 hours

Since the EST clock is the later time, you are 8 hours west of the prime meridian for Eastern Standard Time (75 degrees west of Greenwich)

8 x 15 = 120 degrees

You are at a longitude of 120 + 75 = 195 degrees west of Greenwich, England, which is also 165 degrees east of Greenwich

Page 18: Finding your longitude The trickier part of celestial navigation.

Using a star

• It is Jan. 21 and you see a star of right ascension = 2 hours on your meridian. You will use this observation to calculate your local time.

• Your chronometer, still set at EST, reads 1am.

Page 19: Finding your longitude The trickier part of celestial navigation.

Find the difference in the time

• LST = 2 hours. On Jan 21 the LST at local midnight is 2 x 4 = 8 hours. At 1am (the EST given by your chronometer) the LST would be about 9 hours. You are 7 hours earlier. You must be located 7 hours west of the standard longitude for the Eastern Time Zone.

• You are at 7 x 15 = 105 degrees + 75 degrees west of Greenwich, England. You are 180 degrees west (= 180 degrees east) of Greenwich.

Page 20: Finding your longitude The trickier part of celestial navigation.

You get promoted to admiral