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Constellations convenient for sectioning the grand cellestial sphere into
manageable, recognizeable pieces. Back in 1930 astronomers snapped some chalk lines on the sky, got out their jigsaws and cut out some formal constellation boundaries. They were pretty smart about it -- "they lie along the meridians of right ascension and parallels of declination for the mean equator and equinox of 1875.0" according to: http://www.iau.org/IAU/Activities/no...ure/const.html Looking at The Cambridge Star Atlas 3rd Edition which is based on the 2000.0 catalogues it's pretty obvious that the old border boundaries are no longer convenient. Just look at the UMi boundary closest to the pole! It seems to be a circular arc centered on absolutely nothing pertinent today. To accurately determine which constellation an object is located in today one must translate back to the 1875 frame. How about some new formal boundaries along the meridians of right ascension and parallels of declination for the mean equator and equinox of 2000.0? Surely there's gotta be some good grant money available for that kind of thing. Regards, -- Mark Mark Lepkowski Email: webmaster at mclTunes dot-com http://www.mcltunes.com |
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On Wed, 01 Dec 2004 05:12:33 GMT, "Mark Lepkowski" wrote:
To accurately determine which constellation an object is located in today one must translate back to the 1875 frame. How about some new formal boundaries along the meridians of right ascension and parallels of declination for the mean equator and equinox of 2000.0? How about not! Precessing the constellation boundaries is trivial (literally, three lines of code in C, including a function call to a general precession function). But if you change their locations, you break every piece of astronomical software out there. You also move stars into new constellations, which means some of them now have to be renamed. Every scientific paper that references an object will have to be evaluated for whether that object even exists (with that name) anymore! The existing boundaries are just fine! Who cares if they don't happen to line up with another set of arbitrary coordinates? And even if you change the boundaries to line up with 2000.0 coordinates, it isn't 2000 anymore, so they will still have to be precessed in order to be used. And of course, if we keep moving the boundaries every century or so (to be pretty), after a while the boundaries aren't even going to line up with the classical constellations. We're going to feel pretty silly talking about Scorpius when it is in Sagittarius! _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com |
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Mark Lepkowski wrote:
Constellations convenient for sectioning the grand celestial sphere into manageable, recognizable pieces. Back in 1930 astronomers snapped some chalk lines on the sky, got out their jigsaws and cut out some formal constellation boundaries. They were pretty smart about it -- "they lie along the meridians of right ascension and parallels of declination for the mean equator and equinox of 1875.0" according to: http://www.iau.org/IAU/Activities/no...ure/const.html Looking at The Cambridge Star Atlas 3rd Edition which is based on the 2000.0 catalogues it's pretty obvious that the old border boundaries are no longer convenient. Just look at the UMi boundary closest to the pole! It seems to be a circular arc centered on absolutely nothing pertinent today. To accurately determine which constellation an object is located in today one must translate back to the 1875 frame. How about some new formal boundaries along the meridians of right ascension and parallels of declination for the mean equator and equinox of 2000.0? Surely there's gotta be some good grant money available for that kind of thing. Regards, -- Mark Mark Lepkowski Email: webmaster at mclTunes dot-com http://www.mcltunes.com We like the boundaries to stay with the stars that inspired them in the first place. |
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Sam Wormley wrote:
Mark Lepkowski wrote: Looking at The Cambridge Star Atlas 3rd Edition which is based on the 2000.0 catalogues it's pretty obvious that the old border boundaries are no longer convenient. Just look at the UMi boundary closest to the pole! It seems to be a circular arc centered on absolutely nothing pertinent today. To accurately determine which constellation an object is located in today one must translate back to the 1875 frame. How about some new formal boundaries along the meridians of right ascension and parallels of declination for the mean equator and equinox of 2000.0? Surely there's gotta be some good grant money available for that kind of thing. Regards, -- Mark Mark Lepkowski Email: webmaster at mclTunes dot-com http://www.mcltunes.com We like the boundaries to stay with the stars that inspired them in the first place. I say move Alpharetz back into Pegasus. I'm getting tired of "The Great Triangle of Pegasus". Uncle Bob __________________________________________________ _____________________________ Posted Via Uncensored-News.Com - Accounts Starting At $6.95 - http://www.uncensored-news.com The Worlds Uncensored News Source |
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And of course, if we keep moving the
boundaries every century or so (to be pretty), after a while the boundaries aren't even going to line up with the classical constellations. We're going to feel pretty silly talking about Scorpius when it is in Sagittarius! If that happens, then whoever got the grant money didn't do the job right. |
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How about some new formal boundaries
along the meridians of right ascension and parallels of declination for the mean equator and equinox of 2000.0? Why? Surely there's gotta be some good grant money available for that kind of thing. Again, why? Why create trouble to align borders to arbitary lines? This doesn't even make enough sense to qualify as a troll. Clear Skies Chuck Taylor Do you observe the moon? Try http://groups.yahoo.com/group/lunar-observing/ Are you interested in optics? Try http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ATM_Optics_Software/ ************************************ Regards, -- Mark Mark Lepkowski Email: webmaster at mclTunes dot-com http://www.mcltunes.com |
#7
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I say move Alpharetz back into Pegasus.
I'm getting tired of "The Great Triangle of Pegasus". Uncle Bob Well, it may be inside the modern boundaries of Andromeda, but it's still translated as "the horse's navel." ![]() Marty |
#8
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![]() "CLT" not@thisaddress wrote in message ... How about some new formal boundaries along the meridians of right ascension and parallels of declination for the mean equator and equinox of 2000.0? Why? Why did they choose the meridians of right ascension and parallels of declination for the mean equator and equinox of 1875.0 in 1930? |
#9
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![]() "Chris L Peterson" wrote in message ... Precessing the constellation boundaries is trivial (literally, three lines of code in C, including a function call to a general precession function). So what's the equation that governs the tranformation? |
#10
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Uncle Bob wrote:
I say move Alpharetz back into Pegasus. I'm getting tired of "The Great Triangle of Pegasus". ....and Scorpius wants his claws back. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= East/West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
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