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Quadrature (astronomy)

In spherical astronomy, quadrature is the configuration of a celestial object in which its elongation is perpendicular to the direction of the Sun. It is applied especially to the position of a superior planet or the Moon at its first and last quarter phases. This is not to be confused with the Moon at dichotomy (exactly half-lit) as viewed from Earth, which occurs at 89.85 degrees and 270.15 degrees.

Diagram showing the eastern and western quadratures of a superior planet like Mars

As shown in the diagram, a planet (or other object) can be at the western quadrature (when it is to the west of the Sun when viewed from the Earth) or at the eastern quadrature (when it is to the east of the Sun when viewed from the Earth). Note that an inferior planet can never be at quadrature to the reference planet.

At quadrature, the shadow that a planet casts on its planetary rings or moons appears most offset from the planet (e.g., Saturn's rings); the dark side of a planet (e.g., Mars) is maximally visible.

Since the Sun is not infinitely far away, the Moon is slightly past first quarter phase when the Sun and Moon are perpendicular in the sky to each other.

See also

References

Attribution
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainAnonymous (1911). "Quadrature". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.

quadrature, astronomy, spherical, astronomy, quadrature, configuration, celestial, object, which, elongation, perpendicular, direction, applied, especially, position, superior, planet, moon, first, last, quarter, phases, this, confused, with, moon, dichotomy, . In spherical astronomy quadrature is the configuration of a celestial object in which its elongation is perpendicular to the direction of the Sun It is applied especially to the position of a superior planet or the Moon at its first and last quarter phases This is not to be confused with the Moon at dichotomy exactly half lit as viewed from Earth which occurs at 89 85 degrees and 270 15 degrees Diagram showing the eastern and western quadratures of a superior planet like Mars For other uses see Quadrature disambiguation As shown in the diagram a planet or other object can be at the western quadrature when it is to the west of the Sun when viewed from the Earth or at the eastern quadrature when it is to the east of the Sun when viewed from the Earth Note that an inferior planet can never be at quadrature to the reference planet At quadrature the shadow that a planet casts on its planetary rings or moons appears most offset from the planet e g Saturn s rings the dark side of a planet e g Mars is maximally visible Since the Sun is not infinitely far away the Moon is slightly past first quarter phase when the Sun and Moon are perpendicular in the sky to each other See also EditAstrological aspectReferences EditAttribution This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Anonymous 1911 Quadrature In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Quadrature astronomy amp oldid 1130658842, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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