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Hi!
What does Transit mean? Thanks. |
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#MK wrote:
Hi! What does Transit mean? Thanks. Transit means "cross your local meridian". |
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#MK wrote:
Hi! What does Transit mean? (i) The passage of Mercury, Venus, or a minor planet across the disc of the Sun. (ii) The passage of a planet's moon across the disc of the parent planet. (iii) The passage of a planetary feature (such as Jupiter's Great Red Spot) across the central meridian of the planet. (iv) The passage of an object across the observer's meridian (see culmination). For an on-line astronomical glossary, see: http://astunit.com/tutorials/glossary.htm Best, Stephen -- + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + Stephen Tonkin | ATM Resources; Astro-Tutorials; Astro Books + + (N51.162 E0.995) | http://www.astunit.com + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + |
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Hi there. You posted:
What's the difference between transit and culmination? Culmination is for objects which do not set anywhere on the local horizon (ie: circumpolar stars). Upper culmination is when the star is highest above the horizon (ie: it appears higher in altitude than the north celestial pole) and on the meridian, and lower culmination is when the star is on the meridian but below the north celestial pole. Clear skies to you. -- David W. Knisely Prairie Astronomy Club: http://www.prairieastronomyclub.org Hyde Memorial Observatory: http://www.hydeobservatory.info/ ********************************************** * Attend the 10th Annual NEBRASKA STAR PARTY * * July 27-Aug. 1st, 2003, Merritt Reservoir * * http://www.NebraskaStarParty.org * ********************************************** |
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Paul Schlyter:
Second, for circumpolar objects there is no requirement that their altitude at upper culmination should be higher than the altitude of the celestial pole. As an extreme example, consider an observer at 89 degrees N latitude and an object at +3 degrees declination: to that observer, the celestial pole will be 89 degrees above his horizon, and that object at +3 degrees declination will be 4 degrees above his horizon at upper culmination and 2 degrees above his horizon at lower culmination (ignoring atmospheric refraction). To him, everything north of +1 degree declination will be circumpolar, but very few objects will appear higher in his sky than the north celestial pole. ***** This example is both clever and fascinating. I fear, however, that if I were at +89 I would freeze to death before I had to time to fully grok its elegance. Davoud -- usenet *at* davidillig dawt com |
#6
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# Subject: Transit
# From: "#MK" # Organization: -- # Date: Thu, 24 Jul 2003 02:12:55 GMT # # Hi! # What does Transit mean? # Thanks. You must come from one of THOSE towns? It's a means of shuffling people around a town by little trains that run under the street (oh, sure) or on stilts over the streets (yikes!). These trains got NO ENGINE in front and make a horrendous noise when under steam. You get onto them by climbing down tiny dark ilthy staris or climbing up tiny dark filthy stairs. You pay the fare by buying a token or magnetic ticket and putting it in a turnstile. You get into the train with thoudands of other perfect strangers and smell each other stupid. You should move to a town with transit. --- þ RoseReader 2.52á P005004 |
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