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Old June 25th 10, 04:31 PM posted to sci.astro
Greg Neill[_6_]
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Default Using Sidereal Time and Geocentric Coordinates

W. eWatson wrote:
My recent interest in calculating LMST (Local Mean Sidereal Time) came
about from a paper some 30 years old in which the author produce "The
rectangular geocentric systems of coordinates is given by:

X = (R+h)*cos(phi')*cos(LMST)
Y = (R+h)*cos(phi')*sin(LMST)
Z = (R+h)*cos(phi')
where phi' is the geocentric latitude.

I have not found these equations on the web, and am beginning to think
they have been replaced over the decades. Comments?


Looks like a conversion from a topocentric coordinate
to a rectangular, Earth-centered coordinate system (SEZ ?)
with its fundamental plane coincident with the equatorial
plane and the x-axis pointing to the vernal equinox.

Presumably R is the Earth radius, and h the height above
the surface. Did the paper use this to place the
location of an observatory in the SEZ coordinate system?

This coordinate system is used in the reduction of
topocentric observations of satellites and such to the
SEZ coordinates for orbit tracking.

The book Fundamentals of Astrodynamics by Bate, Mueller,
and White (a real bargain at under $12 at Amazon) covers
this.

Google Books seems to have it online. Check out chapter
two.