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Astronomical coordinate systems

Astronomical coordinate systems are organized arrangements for specifying positions of satellites, planets, stars, galaxies, and other celestial objects relative to physical reference points available to a situated observer (e.g. the true horizon and north cardinal direction to an observer situated on the Earth's surface).[1] Coordinate systems in astronomy can specify an object's position in three-dimensional space or plot merely its direction on a celestial sphere, if the object's distance is unknown or trivial.

Orientation of astronomical coordinates
A star's   galactic,   ecliptic, and   equatorial coordinates, as projected on the celestial sphere. Ecliptic and equatorial coordinates share the   March equinox as the primary direction, and galactic coordinates are referred to the   galactic center. The origin of coordinates (the "center of the sphere") is ambiguous; see celestial sphere for more information.

Spherical coordinates, projected on the celestial sphere, are analogous to the geographic coordinate system used on the surface of Earth. These differ in their choice of fundamental plane, which divides the celestial sphere into two equal hemispheres along a great circle. Rectangular coordinates, in appropriate units, have the same fundamental (x, y) plane and primary (x-axis) direction, such as a rotation axis. Each coordinate system is named after its choice of fundamental plane.

Coordinate systems

The following table lists the common coordinate systems in use by the astronomical community. The fundamental plane divides the celestial sphere into two equal hemispheres and defines the baseline for the latitudinal coordinates, similar to the equator in the geographic coordinate system. The poles are located at ±90° from the fundamental plane. The primary direction is the starting point of the longitudinal coordinates. The origin is the zero distance point, the "center of the celestial sphere", although the definition of celestial sphere is ambiguous about the definition of its center point.

Coordinate system[2] Center point
(origin)
Fundamental plane
(0° latitude)
Poles Coordinates Primary direction
(0° longitude)
Latitude Longitude
Horizontal (also called alt-az or el-az) Observer Horizon Zenith, nadir Altitude (a) or elevation Azimuth (A) North or south point of horizon
Equatorial Center of the Earth (geocentric), or Sun (heliocentric) Celestial equator Celestial poles Declination (δ) Right ascension (α)
or hour angle (h)
March equinox
Ecliptic Ecliptic Ecliptic poles Ecliptic latitude (β) Ecliptic longitude (λ)
Galactic Center of the Sun Galactic plane Galactic poles Galactic latitude (b) Galactic longitude (l) Galactic Center
Supergalactic Supergalactic plane Supergalactic poles Supergalactic latitude (SGB) Supergalactic longitude (SGL) Intersection of supergalactic plane and galactic plane

Horizontal system

The horizontal, or altitude-azimuth, system is based on the position of the observer on Earth, which revolves around its own axis once per sidereal day (23 hours, 56 minutes and 4.091 seconds) in relation to the star background. The positioning of a celestial object by the horizontal system varies with time, but is a useful coordinate system for locating and tracking objects for observers on Earth. It is based on the position of stars relative to an observer's ideal horizon.

Equatorial system

The equatorial coordinate system is centered at Earth's center, but fixed relative to the celestial poles and the March equinox. The coordinates are based on the location of stars relative to Earth's equator if it were projected out to an infinite distance. The equatorial describes the sky as seen from the Solar System, and modern star maps almost exclusively use equatorial coordinates.

The equatorial system is the normal coordinate system for most professional and many amateur astronomers having an equatorial mount that follows the movement of the sky during the night. Celestial objects are found by adjusting the telescope's or other instrument's scales so that they match the equatorial coordinates of the selected object to observe.

Popular choices of pole and equator are the older B1950 and the modern J2000 systems, but a pole and equator "of date" can also be used, meaning one appropriate to the date under consideration, such as when a measurement of the position of a planet or spacecraft is made. There are also subdivisions into "mean of date" coordinates, which average out or ignore nutation, and "true of date," which include nutation.

Ecliptic system

The fundamental plane is the plane of the Earth's orbit, called the ecliptic plane. There are two principal variants of the ecliptic coordinate system: geocentric ecliptic coordinates centered on the Earth and heliocentric ecliptic coordinates centered on the center of mass of the Solar System.

The geocentric ecliptic system was the principal coordinate system for ancient astronomy and is still useful for computing the apparent motions of the Sun, Moon, and planets.[3]

The heliocentric ecliptic system describes the planets' orbital movement around the Sun, and centers on the barycenter of the Solar System (i.e. very close to the center of the Sun). The system is primarily used for computing the positions of planets and other Solar System bodies, as well as defining their orbital elements.

Galactic system

The galactic coordinate system uses the approximate plane of our galaxy as its fundamental plane. The Solar System is still the center of the coordinate system, and the zero point is defined as the direction towards the galactic center. Galactic latitude resembles the elevation above the galactic plane and galactic longitude determines direction relative to the center of the galaxy.

Supergalactic system

The supergalactic coordinate system corresponds to a fundamental plane that contains a higher than average number of local galaxies in the sky as seen from Earth.

Converting coordinates

Conversions between the various coordinate systems are given.[4] See the notes before using these equations.

Notation

Hour angle ↔ right ascension

 

Equatorial ↔ ecliptic

The classical equations, derived from spherical trigonometry, for the longitudinal coordinate are presented to the right of a bracket; dividing the first equation by the second gives the convenient tangent equation seen on the left.[5] The rotation matrix equivalent is given beneath each case.[6] This division is ambiguous because tan has a period of 180° (π) whereas cos and sin have periods of 360° (2π).

 

Equatorial ↔ horizontal

Azimuth (A) is measured from the south point, turning positive to the west.[7] Zenith distance, the angular distance along the great circle from the zenith to a celestial object, is simply the complementary angle of the altitude: 90° − a.[8]

 

In solving the tan(A) equation for A, in order to avoid the ambiguity of the arctangent, use of the two-argument arctangent, denoted arctan(x,y), is recommended. The two-argument arctangent computes the arctangent of y/x, and accounts for the quadrant in which it is being computed. Thus, consistent with the convention of azimuth being measured from the south and opening positive to the west,

 ,

where

 .

If the above formula produces a negative value for A, it can be rendered positive by simply adding 360°.

 [a]

Again, in solving the tan(h) equation for h, use of the two-argument arctangent that accounts for the quadrant is recommended. Thus, again consistent with the convention of azimuth being measured from the south and opening positive to the west,

 ,

where

 

Equatorial ↔ galactic

These equations[14] are for converting equatorial coordinates to Galactic coordinates.

 

  are the equatorial coordinates of the North Galactic Pole and   is the Galactic longitude of the North Celestial Pole. Referred to J2000.0 the values of these quantities are:

 

If the equatorial coordinates are referred to another equinox, they must be precessed to their place at J2000.0 before applying these formulae.

These equations convert to equatorial coordinates referred to B2000.0.

 

Notes on conversion

  • Angles in the degrees ( ° ), minutes ( ′ ), and seconds ( ″ ) of sexagesimal measure must be converted to decimal before calculations are performed. Whether they are converted to decimal degrees or radians depends upon the particular calculating machine or program. Negative angles must be carefully handled; –10° 20′ 30″ must be converted as −10° −20′ −30″.
  • Angles in the hours ( h ), minutes ( m ), and seconds ( s ) of time measure must be converted to decimal degrees or radians before calculations are performed. 1h = 15°; 1m = 15′; 1s = 15″
  • Angles greater than 360° (2π) or less than 0° may need to be reduced to the range 0°−360° (0–2π) depending upon the particular calculating machine or program.
  • The cosine of a latitude (declination, ecliptic and Galactic latitude, and altitude) are never negative by definition, since the latitude varies between −90° and +90°.
  • Inverse trigonometric functions arcsine, arccosine and arctangent are quadrant-ambiguous, and results should be carefully evaluated. Use of the second arctangent function (denoted in computing as atn2(y,x) or atan2(y,x), which calculates the arctangent of y/x using the sign of both arguments to determine the right quadrant) is recommended when calculating longitude/right ascension/azimuth. An equation which finds the sine, followed by the arcsin function, is recommended when calculating latitude/declination/altitude.
  • Azimuth (A) is referred here to the south point of the horizon, the common astronomical reckoning. An object on the meridian to the south of the observer has A = h = 0° with this usage. However, n Astropy's AltAz, in the Large Binocular Telescope FITS file convention, in XEphem, in the IAU library Standards of Fundamental Astronomy and Section B of the Astronomical Almanac for example, the azimuth is East of North. In navigation and some other disciplines, azimuth is figured from the north.
  • The equations for altitude (a) do not account for atmospheric refraction.
  • The equations for horizontal coordinates do not account for diurnal parallax, that is, the small offset in the position of a celestial object caused by the position of the observer on the Earth's surface. This effect is significant for the Moon, less so for the planets, minute for stars or more distant objects.
  • Observer's longitude (λo) here is measured positively westward from the prime meridian; this is contrary to current IAU standards.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Depending on the azimuth convention in use, the signs of cos A and sin A appear in all four different combinations. Karttunen et al.,[9] Taff,[10] and Roth[11] define A clockwise from the south. Lang[12] defines it north through east, Smart[13] north through west. Meeus (1991),[4] p. 89: sin δ = sin φ sin a − cos φ cos a cos A; Explanatory Supplement (1961),[5] p. 26: sin δ = sin a sin φ + cos a cos A cos φ.

References

  1. ^ Kanas, Nick (2021). "Star and Solar System Maps: A History of Celestial Cartography". Research Notes of the AAS. 5 (4): 69. Bibcode:2021RNAAS...5...69K. doi:10.3847/2515-5172/abf35c. S2CID 233522547.
  2. ^ Majewski, Steve. . UVa Department of Astronomy. Archived from the original on 12 March 2016. Retrieved 19 March 2011.
  3. ^ Aaboe, Asger. 2001 Episodes from the Early History of Astronomy. New York: Springer-Verlag., pp. 17–19.
  4. ^ a b Meeus, Jean (1991). Astronomical Algorithms. Willmann-Bell, Inc., Richmond, VA. ISBN 0-943396-35-2., chap. 12
  5. ^ a b U.S. Naval Observatory, Nautical Almanac Office; H.M. Nautical Almanac Office (1961). Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Ephemeris and the American Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac. H.M. Stationery Office, London., sec. 2A
  6. ^ U.S. Naval Observatory, Nautical Almanac Office (1992). P. Kenneth Seidelmann (ed.). Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac. University Science Books, Mill Valley, CA. ISBN 0-935702-68-7., section 11.43
  7. ^ Montenbruck, Oliver; Pfleger, Thomas (2000). Astronomy on the Personal Computer. Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg. ISBN 978-3-540-67221-0., pp 35-37
  8. ^ U.S. Naval Observatory, Nautical Almanac Office; U.K. Hydrographic Office, H.M. Nautical Almanac Office (2008). The Astronomical Almanac for the Year 2010. U.S. Govt. Printing Office. p. M18. ISBN 978-0160820083.
  9. ^ Karttunen, H.; Kröger, P.; Oja, H.; Poutanen, M.; Donner, H. J. (2006). Fundamental Astronomy (5 ed.). Bibcode:2003fuas.book.....K. ISBN 978-3-540-34143-7.
  10. ^ Taff, L. G. (1981). Computational spherical astronomy. Wiley. Bibcode:1981csa..book.....T. ISBN 0-471-06257-X.
  11. ^ Roth, G. D. (23 October 1989). Handbuch für Sternenfreunde. Springer. ISBN 3-540-19436-3.
  12. ^ Lang, Kenneth R. (1978). Astrophysical Formulae. Springer. Bibcode:1978afcp.book.....L. ISBN 3-540-09064-9.
  13. ^ Smart, William Marshall (1949). Text-book on spherical astronomy. Cambridge University Press. Bibcode:1965tbsa.book.....S.
  14. ^ Poleski, Radosław (2013). "Transformation of the equatorial proper motion to the Galactic system". arXiv:1306.2945 [astro-ph.IM].

External links

  • NOVAS, the United States Naval Observatory's Vector Astrometry Software, an integrated package of subroutines and functions for computing various commonly needed quantities in positional astronomy.
  • SOFA, the IAU's Standards of Fundamental Astronomy, an accessible and authoritative set of algorithms and procedures that implement standard models used in fundamental astronomy.
  • This article was originally based on Jason Harris' Astroinfo, which comes along with KStars, a KDE Desktop Planetarium for Linux/KDE.

astronomical, coordinate, systems, organized, arrangements, specifying, positions, satellites, planets, stars, galaxies, other, celestial, objects, relative, physical, reference, points, available, situated, observer, true, horizon, north, cardinal, direction,. Astronomical coordinate systems are organized arrangements for specifying positions of satellites planets stars galaxies and other celestial objects relative to physical reference points available to a situated observer e g the true horizon and north cardinal direction to an observer situated on the Earth s surface 1 Coordinate systems in astronomy can specify an object s position in three dimensional space or plot merely its direction on a celestial sphere if the object s distance is unknown or trivial Orientation of astronomical coordinatesA star s galactic ecliptic and equatorial coordinates as projected on the celestial sphere Ecliptic and equatorial coordinates share the March equinox as the primary direction and galactic coordinates are referred to the galactic center The origin of coordinates the center of the sphere is ambiguous see celestial sphere for more information Spherical coordinates projected on the celestial sphere are analogous to the geographic coordinate system used on the surface of Earth These differ in their choice of fundamental plane which divides the celestial sphere into two equal hemispheres along a great circle Rectangular coordinates in appropriate units have the same fundamental x y plane and primary x axis direction such as a rotation axis Each coordinate system is named after its choice of fundamental plane Contents 1 Coordinate systems 1 1 Horizontal system 1 2 Equatorial system 1 3 Ecliptic system 1 4 Galactic system 1 5 Supergalactic system 2 Converting coordinates 2 1 Notation 2 2 Hour angle right ascension 2 3 Equatorial ecliptic 2 4 Equatorial horizontal 2 5 Equatorial galactic 2 6 Notes on conversion 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksCoordinate systems EditThe following table lists the common coordinate systems in use by the astronomical community The fundamental plane divides the celestial sphere into two equal hemispheres and defines the baseline for the latitudinal coordinates similar to the equator in the geographic coordinate system The poles are located at 90 from the fundamental plane The primary direction is the starting point of the longitudinal coordinates The origin is the zero distance point the center of the celestial sphere although the definition of celestial sphere is ambiguous about the definition of its center point Coordinate system 2 Center point origin Fundamental plane 0 latitude Poles Coordinates Primary direction 0 longitude Latitude LongitudeHorizontal also called alt az or el az Observer Horizon Zenith nadir Altitude a or elevation Azimuth A North or south point of horizonEquatorial Center of the Earth geocentric or Sun heliocentric Celestial equator Celestial poles Declination d Right ascension a or hour angle h March equinoxEcliptic Ecliptic Ecliptic poles Ecliptic latitude b Ecliptic longitude l Galactic Center of the Sun Galactic plane Galactic poles Galactic latitude b Galactic longitude l Galactic CenterSupergalactic Supergalactic plane Supergalactic poles Supergalactic latitude SGB Supergalactic longitude SGL Intersection of supergalactic plane and galactic planeHorizontal system Edit Main article Horizontal coordinate system The horizontal or altitude azimuth system is based on the position of the observer on Earth which revolves around its own axis once per sidereal day 23 hours 56 minutes and 4 091 seconds in relation to the star background The positioning of a celestial object by the horizontal system varies with time but is a useful coordinate system for locating and tracking objects for observers on Earth It is based on the position of stars relative to an observer s ideal horizon Equatorial system Edit Main article Equatorial coordinate system The equatorial coordinate system is centered at Earth s center but fixed relative to the celestial poles and the March equinox The coordinates are based on the location of stars relative to Earth s equator if it were projected out to an infinite distance The equatorial describes the sky as seen from the Solar System and modern star maps almost exclusively use equatorial coordinates The equatorial system is the normal coordinate system for most professional and many amateur astronomers having an equatorial mount that follows the movement of the sky during the night Celestial objects are found by adjusting the telescope s or other instrument s scales so that they match the equatorial coordinates of the selected object to observe Popular choices of pole and equator are the older B1950 and the modern J2000 systems but a pole and equator of date can also be used meaning one appropriate to the date under consideration such as when a measurement of the position of a planet or spacecraft is made There are also subdivisions into mean of date coordinates which average out or ignore nutation and true of date which include nutation Ecliptic system Edit Main article Ecliptic coordinate system The fundamental plane is the plane of the Earth s orbit called the ecliptic plane There are two principal variants of the ecliptic coordinate system geocentric ecliptic coordinates centered on the Earth and heliocentric ecliptic coordinates centered on the center of mass of the Solar System The geocentric ecliptic system was the principal coordinate system for ancient astronomy and is still useful for computing the apparent motions of the Sun Moon and planets 3 The heliocentric ecliptic system describes the planets orbital movement around the Sun and centers on the barycenter of the Solar System i e very close to the center of the Sun The system is primarily used for computing the positions of planets and other Solar System bodies as well as defining their orbital elements Galactic system Edit Main article Galactic coordinate system The galactic coordinate system uses the approximate plane of our galaxy as its fundamental plane The Solar System is still the center of the coordinate system and the zero point is defined as the direction towards the galactic center Galactic latitude resembles the elevation above the galactic plane and galactic longitude determines direction relative to the center of the galaxy Supergalactic system Edit Main article Supergalactic coordinate system The supergalactic coordinate system corresponds to a fundamental plane that contains a higher than average number of local galaxies in the sky as seen from Earth Converting coordinates EditSee also Euler angles and Rotation matrix Conversions between the various coordinate systems are given 4 See the notes before using these equations Notation Edit Horizontal coordinates A azimuth a altitude Equatorial coordinates a right ascension d declination h hour angle Ecliptic coordinates l ecliptic longitude b ecliptic latitude Galactic coordinates l galactic longitude b galactic latitude Miscellaneous lo observer s longitude ϕo observer s latitude e obliquity of the ecliptic about 23 4 8L local sidereal time 8G Greenwich sidereal timeHour angle right ascension Edit h 8 L a or h 8 G l o a a 8 L h or a 8 G l o h displaystyle begin aligned h amp theta text L alpha amp amp mbox or amp h amp theta text G lambda text o alpha alpha amp theta text L h amp amp mbox or amp alpha amp theta text G lambda text o h end aligned Equatorial ecliptic Edit The classical equations derived from spherical trigonometry for the longitudinal coordinate are presented to the right of a bracket dividing the first equation by the second gives the convenient tangent equation seen on the left 5 The rotation matrix equivalent is given beneath each case 6 This division is ambiguous because tan has a period of 180 p whereas cos and sin have periods of 360 2p tan l sin a cos e tan d sin e cos a cos b sin l cos d sin a cos e sin d sin e cos b cos l cos d cos a sin b sin d cos e cos d sin e sin a cos b cos l cos b sin l sin b 1 0 0 0 cos e sin e 0 sin e cos e cos d cos a cos d sin a sin d tan a sin l cos e tan b sin e cos l cos d sin a cos b sin l cos e sin b sin e cos d cos a cos b cos l sin d sin b cos e cos b sin e sin l cos d cos a cos d sin a sin d 1 0 0 0 cos e sin e 0 sin e cos e cos b cos l cos b sin l sin b displaystyle begin aligned tan left lambda right amp sin left alpha right cos left varepsilon right tan left delta right sin left varepsilon right over cos left alpha right qquad begin cases cos left beta right sin left lambda right cos left delta right sin left alpha right cos left varepsilon right sin left delta right sin left varepsilon right cos left beta right cos left lambda right cos left delta right cos left alpha right end cases sin left beta right amp sin left delta right cos left varepsilon right cos left delta right sin left varepsilon right sin left alpha right 3pt begin bmatrix cos left beta right cos left lambda right cos left beta right sin left lambda right sin left beta right end bmatrix amp begin bmatrix 1 amp 0 amp 0 0 amp cos left varepsilon right amp sin left varepsilon right 0 amp sin left varepsilon right amp cos left varepsilon right end bmatrix begin bmatrix cos left delta right cos left alpha right cos left delta right sin left alpha right sin left delta right end bmatrix 6pt tan left alpha right amp sin left lambda right cos left varepsilon right tan left beta right sin left varepsilon right over cos left lambda right qquad begin cases cos left delta right sin left alpha right cos left beta right sin left lambda right cos left varepsilon right sin left beta right sin left varepsilon right cos left delta right cos left alpha right cos left beta right cos left lambda right end cases 3pt sin left delta right amp sin left beta right cos left varepsilon right cos left beta right sin left varepsilon right sin left lambda right 6pt begin bmatrix cos left delta right cos left alpha right cos left delta right sin left alpha right sin left delta right end bmatrix amp begin bmatrix 1 amp 0 amp 0 0 amp cos left varepsilon right amp sin left varepsilon right 0 amp sin left varepsilon right amp cos left varepsilon right end bmatrix begin bmatrix cos left beta right cos left lambda right cos left beta right sin left lambda right sin left beta right end bmatrix end aligned Equatorial horizontal Edit Azimuth A is measured from the south point turning positive to the west 7 Zenith distance the angular distance along the great circle from the zenith to a celestial object is simply the complementary angle of the altitude 90 a 8 tan A sin h cos h sin ϕ o tan d cos ϕ o cos a sin A cos d sin h cos a cos A cos d cos h sin ϕ o sin d cos ϕ o sin a sin ϕ o sin d cos ϕ o cos d cos h displaystyle begin aligned tan left A right amp sin left h right over cos left h right sin left phi text o right tan left delta right cos left phi text o right qquad begin cases cos left a right sin left A right cos left delta right sin left h right cos left a right cos left A right cos left delta right cos left h right sin left phi text o right sin left delta right cos left phi text o right end cases 3pt sin left a right amp sin left phi text o right sin left delta right cos left phi text o right cos left delta right cos left h right end aligned In solving the tan A equation for A in order to avoid the ambiguity of the arctangent use of the two argument arctangent denoted arctan x y is recommended The two argument arctangent computes the arctangent of y x and accounts for the quadrant in which it is being computed Thus consistent with the convention of azimuth being measured from the south and opening positive to the west A arctan x y displaystyle A arctan x y where x sin ϕ o cos d cos h cos ϕ o sin d y cos d sin h displaystyle begin aligned x amp sin left phi text o right cos left delta right cos left h right cos left phi text o right sin left delta right y amp cos left delta right sin left h right end aligned If the above formula produces a negative value for A it can be rendered positive by simply adding 360 cos a cos A cos a sin A sin a sin ϕ o 0 cos ϕ o 0 1 0 cos ϕ o 0 sin ϕ o cos d cos h cos d sin h sin d sin ϕ o 0 cos ϕ o 0 1 0 cos ϕ o 0 sin ϕ o cos 8 L sin 8 L 0 sin 8 L cos 8 L 0 0 0 1 cos d cos a cos d sin a sin d tan h sin A cos A sin ϕ o tan a cos ϕ o cos d sin h cos a sin A cos d cos h sin a cos ϕ o cos a cos A sin ϕ o sin d sin ϕ o sin a cos ϕ o cos a cos A displaystyle begin aligned begin bmatrix cos left a right cos left A right cos left a right sin left A right sin left a right end bmatrix amp begin bmatrix sin left phi text o right amp 0 amp cos left phi text o right 0 amp 1 amp 0 cos left phi text o right amp 0 amp sin left phi text o right end bmatrix begin bmatrix cos left delta right cos left h right cos left delta right sin left h right sin left delta right end bmatrix amp begin bmatrix sin left phi text o right amp 0 amp cos left phi text o right 0 amp 1 amp 0 cos left phi text o right amp 0 amp sin left phi text o right end bmatrix begin bmatrix cos left theta L right amp sin left theta L right amp 0 sin left theta L right amp cos left theta L right amp 0 0 amp 0 amp 1 end bmatrix begin bmatrix cos left delta right cos left alpha right cos left delta right sin left alpha right sin left delta right end bmatrix 6pt tan left h right amp sin left A right over cos left A right sin left phi text o right tan left a right cos left phi text o right qquad begin cases cos left delta right sin left h right cos left a right sin left A right cos left delta right cos left h right sin left a right cos left phi text o right cos left a right cos left A right sin left phi text o right end cases 3pt sin left delta right amp sin left phi text o right sin left a right cos left phi text o right cos left a right cos left A right end aligned a Again in solving the tan h equation for h use of the two argument arctangent that accounts for the quadrant is recommended Thus again consistent with the convention of azimuth being measured from the south and opening positive to the west h arctan x y displaystyle h arctan x y where x sin ϕ o cos a cos A cos ϕ o sin a y cos a sin A cos d cos h cos d sin h sin d sin ϕ o 0 cos ϕ o 0 1 0 cos ϕ o 0 sin ϕ o cos a cos A cos a sin A sin a cos d cos a cos d sin a sin d cos 8 L sin 8 L 0 sin 8 L cos 8 L 0 0 0 1 sin ϕ o 0 cos ϕ o 0 1 0 cos ϕ o 0 sin ϕ o cos a cos A cos a sin A sin a displaystyle begin aligned x amp sin left phi text o right cos left a right cos left A right cos left phi text o right sin left a right y amp cos left a right sin left A right 3pt begin bmatrix cos left delta right cos left h right cos left delta right sin left h right sin left delta right end bmatrix amp begin bmatrix sin left phi text o right amp 0 amp cos left phi text o right 0 amp 1 amp 0 cos left phi text o right amp 0 amp sin left phi text o right end bmatrix begin bmatrix cos left a right cos left A right cos left a right sin left A right sin left a right end bmatrix begin bmatrix cos left delta right cos left alpha right cos left delta right sin left alpha right sin left delta right end bmatrix amp begin bmatrix cos left theta L right amp sin left theta L right amp 0 sin left theta L right amp cos left theta L right amp 0 0 amp 0 amp 1 end bmatrix begin bmatrix sin left phi text o right amp 0 amp cos left phi text o right 0 amp 1 amp 0 cos left phi text o right amp 0 amp sin left phi text o right end bmatrix begin bmatrix cos left a right cos left A right cos left a right sin left A right sin left a right end bmatrix end aligned Equatorial galactic Edit These equations 14 are for converting equatorial coordinates to Galactic coordinates cos l NCP l cos b sin d cos d G cos d sin d G cos a a G sin l NCP l cos b cos d sin a a G sin b sin d sin d G cos d cos d G cos a a G displaystyle begin aligned cos left l text NCP l right cos b amp sin left delta right cos left delta text G right cos left delta right sin left delta text G right cos left alpha alpha text G right sin left l text NCP l right cos b amp cos delta sin left alpha alpha text G right sin left b right amp sin left delta right sin left delta text G right cos left delta right cos left delta text G right cos left alpha alpha text G right end aligned a G d G displaystyle alpha text G delta text G are the equatorial coordinates of the North Galactic Pole and l NCP displaystyle l text NCP is the Galactic longitude of the North Celestial Pole Referred to J2000 0 the values of these quantities are a G 192 85948 d G 27 12825 l NCP 122 93192 displaystyle alpha G 192 85948 circ qquad delta G 27 12825 circ qquad l text NCP 122 93192 circ If the equatorial coordinates are referred to another equinox they must be precessed to their place at J2000 0 before applying these formulae These equations convert to equatorial coordinates referred to B2000 0 sin a a G cos d cos b sin l NCP l cos a a G cos d sin b cos d G cos b sin d G cos l NCP l sin d sin b sin d G cos b cos d G cos l NCP l displaystyle begin aligned sin left alpha alpha text G right cos left delta right amp cos left b right sin left l text NCP l right cos left alpha alpha text G right cos left delta right amp sin left b right cos left delta text G right cos left b right sin left delta text G right cos left l text NCP l right sin left delta right amp sin left b right sin left delta text G right cos left b right cos left delta text G right cos left l text NCP l right end aligned Notes on conversion Edit Angles in the degrees minutes and seconds of sexagesimal measure must be converted to decimal before calculations are performed Whether they are converted to decimal degrees or radians depends upon the particular calculating machine or program Negative angles must be carefully handled 10 20 30 must be converted as 10 20 30 Angles in the hours h minutes m and seconds s of time measure must be converted to decimal degrees or radians before calculations are performed 1h 15 1m 15 1s 15 Angles greater than 360 2p or less than 0 may need to be reduced to the range 0 360 0 2p depending upon the particular calculating machine or program The cosine of a latitude declination ecliptic and Galactic latitude and altitude are never negative by definition since the latitude varies between 90 and 90 Inverse trigonometric functions arcsine arccosine and arctangent are quadrant ambiguous and results should be carefully evaluated Use of the second arctangent function denoted in computing as atn2 y x or atan2 y x which calculates the arctangent of y x using the sign of both arguments to determine the right quadrant is recommended when calculating longitude right ascension azimuth An equation which finds the sine followed by the arcsin function is recommended when calculating latitude declination altitude Azimuth A is referred here to the south point of the horizon the common astronomical reckoning An object on the meridian to the south of the observer has A h 0 with this usage However n Astropy s AltAz in the Large Binocular Telescope FITS file convention in XEphem in the IAU library Standards of Fundamental Astronomy and Section B of the Astronomical Almanac for example the azimuth is East of North In navigation and some other disciplines azimuth is figured from the north The equations for altitude a do not account for atmospheric refraction The equations for horizontal coordinates do not account for diurnal parallax that is the small offset in the position of a celestial object caused by the position of the observer on the Earth s surface This effect is significant for the Moon less so for the planets minute for stars or more distant objects Observer s longitude lo here is measured positively westward from the prime meridian this is contrary to current IAU standards See also EditApparent longitude Azimuth Horizontal angle from north or other reference cardinal direction Barycentric celestial reference system Celestial coordinate systemPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Celestial sphere Imaginary sphere of arbitrarily large radius concentric with the observer International Celestial Reference System and Frame Current standard celestial reference system and framePages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Orbital elements Parameters that uniquely identify a specific orbit Planetary coordinate system Celestial coordinate system Terrestrial reference frame The reference frame as one views from earthNotes Edit Depending on the azimuth convention in use the signs of cos A and sin A appear in all four different combinations Karttunen et al 9 Taff 10 and Roth 11 define A clockwise from the south Lang 12 defines it north through east Smart 13 north through west Meeus 1991 4 p 89 sin d sin f sin a cos f cos a cos A Explanatory Supplement 1961 5 p 26 sin d sin a sin f cos a cos A cos f References Edit Kanas Nick 2021 Star and Solar System Maps A History of Celestial Cartography Research Notes of the AAS 5 4 69 Bibcode 2021RNAAS 5 69K doi 10 3847 2515 5172 abf35c S2CID 233522547 Majewski Steve Coordinate Systems UVa Department of Astronomy Archived from the original on 12 March 2016 Retrieved 19 March 2011 Aaboe Asger 2001 Episodes from the Early History of Astronomy New York Springer Verlag pp 17 19 a b Meeus Jean 1991 Astronomical Algorithms Willmann Bell Inc Richmond VA ISBN 0 943396 35 2 chap 12 a b U S Naval Observatory Nautical Almanac Office H M Nautical Almanac Office 1961 Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Ephemeris and the American Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac H M Stationery Office London sec 2A U S Naval Observatory Nautical Almanac Office 1992 P Kenneth Seidelmann ed Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac University Science Books Mill Valley CA ISBN 0 935702 68 7 section 11 43 Montenbruck Oliver Pfleger Thomas 2000 Astronomy on the Personal Computer Springer Verlag Berlin Heidelberg ISBN 978 3 540 67221 0 pp 35 37 U S Naval Observatory Nautical Almanac Office U K Hydrographic Office H M Nautical Almanac Office 2008 The Astronomical Almanac for the Year 2010 U S Govt Printing Office p M18 ISBN 978 0160820083 Karttunen H Kroger P Oja H Poutanen M Donner H J 2006 Fundamental Astronomy 5 ed Bibcode 2003fuas book K ISBN 978 3 540 34143 7 Taff L G 1981 Computational spherical astronomy Wiley Bibcode 1981csa book T ISBN 0 471 06257 X Roth G D 23 October 1989 Handbuch fur Sternenfreunde Springer ISBN 3 540 19436 3 Lang Kenneth R 1978 Astrophysical Formulae Springer Bibcode 1978afcp book L ISBN 3 540 09064 9 Smart William Marshall 1949 Text book on spherical astronomy Cambridge University Press Bibcode 1965tbsa book S Poleski Radoslaw 2013 Transformation of the equatorial proper motion to the Galactic system arXiv 1306 2945 astro ph IM External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Astronomical coordinate systems NOVAS the United States Naval Observatory s Vector Astrometry Software an integrated package of subroutines and functions for computing various commonly needed quantities in positional astronomy SOFA the IAU s Standards of Fundamental Astronomy an accessible and authoritative set of algorithms and procedures that implement standard models used in fundamental astronomy This article was originally based on Jason Harris Astroinfo which comes along with KStars a KDE Desktop Planetarium for Linux KDE Portals Astronomy Stars Spaceflight Outer space Science Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Astronomical coordinate systems amp oldid 1138674398 Coordinate systems, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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