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Greetings. I expect that the information I seek is either available in a
table somewhere or can be easily calculated with the right set of equations. I would be grateful if anyone could point me to one or the other of these solutions. Assume a square house, with each side directly facing a cardinal point. Assume further no obstructions to the horizon. For a particular latitude and longitude, how can I determine start-time and stop-time for direct sunlight entering east windows and west windows, for any given day of the year? Thanks in advance. cheers, Henry |
#2
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"Henry" wrote in message
... Assume a square house, with each side directly facing a cardinal point. Assume further no obstructions to the horizon. For a particular latitude and longitude, how can I determine start-time and stop-time for direct sunlight entering east windows and west windows, for any given day of the year? A computer program can give you the Altitude and Azimuth of the Sun for any given time for a given location. I provided such a program in issue #41 of The Orrery newsletter, for example. Some info on The Orrery can be found at: http://members.allstream.net/~gneill/orrery.html The program probably would provide far more positional accuracy than you could need for your application, and you'd have to contact me to order the back issue, get the program running, and so on. Alternatively, you might wish to make due with an on-line service which can generate a table for a given location. In this case, I suggest the U.S. Naval Observatory site: http://aa.usno.navy.mil/data/ Choose the link for Altitude and Azimuth under the Positions of the Sun and Moon heading. You can enter a location by (U.S.) city name, or by longitude and latitude. So, for example, here's an extract of a table generated for Colorado Springs for today, January 1st 2003: ---------------------------------------- Astronomical Applications Dept. U.S. Naval Observatory Washington, DC 20392-5420 COLORADO SPRINGS, COLORADO o , o , W104 48, N38 51 Altitude and Azimuth of the Sun Jan 1, 2004 Mountain Standard Time Altitude Azimuth (E of N) h m o o 06:20 -11.0 110.8 06:30 -9.2 112.2 06:40 -7.4 113.7 06:50 -5.6 115.2 07:00 -3.9 116.7 07:10 -2.1 118.2 07:20 0.1 119.7 ---------------------------------------- The rest is geometry which depends upon the details of your building. |
#3
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"Henry" wrote in message
... Assume a square house, with each side directly facing a cardinal point. Assume further no obstructions to the horizon. For a particular latitude and longitude, how can I determine start-time and stop-time for direct sunlight entering east windows and west windows, for any given day of the year? A computer program can give you the Altitude and Azimuth of the Sun for any given time for a given location. I provided such a program in issue #41 of The Orrery newsletter, for example. Some info on The Orrery can be found at: http://members.allstream.net/~gneill/orrery.html The program probably would provide far more positional accuracy than you could need for your application, and you'd have to contact me to order the back issue, get the program running, and so on. Alternatively, you might wish to make due with an on-line service which can generate a table for a given location. In this case, I suggest the U.S. Naval Observatory site: http://aa.usno.navy.mil/data/ Choose the link for Altitude and Azimuth under the Positions of the Sun and Moon heading. You can enter a location by (U.S.) city name, or by longitude and latitude. So, for example, here's an extract of a table generated for Colorado Springs for today, January 1st 2003: ---------------------------------------- Astronomical Applications Dept. U.S. Naval Observatory Washington, DC 20392-5420 COLORADO SPRINGS, COLORADO o , o , W104 48, N38 51 Altitude and Azimuth of the Sun Jan 1, 2004 Mountain Standard Time Altitude Azimuth (E of N) h m o o 06:20 -11.0 110.8 06:30 -9.2 112.2 06:40 -7.4 113.7 06:50 -5.6 115.2 07:00 -3.9 116.7 07:10 -2.1 118.2 07:20 0.1 119.7 ---------------------------------------- The rest is geometry which depends upon the details of your building. |
#4
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You'll need to do a bit of math but this website will show you the Alt and
Az of the sun at any point on Earth at any time:- http://www.susdesign.com/sunangle/ . Alan C "Henry" wrote in message ... Greetings. I expect that the information I seek is either available in a table somewhere or can be easily calculated with the right set of equations. I would be grateful if anyone could point me to one or the other of these solutions. --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.560 / Virus Database: 352 - Release Date: 08/01/2004 |
#5
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You'll need to do a bit of math but this website will show you the Alt and
Az of the sun at any point on Earth at any time:- http://www.susdesign.com/sunangle/ . Alan C "Henry" wrote in message ... Greetings. I expect that the information I seek is either available in a table somewhere or can be easily calculated with the right set of equations. I would be grateful if anyone could point me to one or the other of these solutions. --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.560 / Virus Database: 352 - Release Date: 08/01/2004 |
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