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A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Azimuth / elevation from sextant observations
From: Paul Hirose
Date: 2019 Jul 30, 14:26 -0700
From: Paul Hirose
Date: 2019 Jul 30, 14:26 -0700
On 2019-07-30 8:16, Peter Monta wrote: > If you're observing from a fixed spot, and you know the > direction to a distant landmark, then that's just as good as a sea horizon > (in fact better, since the landmark is likely to be at least a few degrees > above the true horizon and thus in a better atmospheric path). The > direction (i.e. topocentric azimuth and elevation) can be found with (what > else?) celestial, using either a sextant or a theodolite. Several years ago I had a dream in which I was observing sextant angles between a distant mountain peak and the Sun. Upon waking I remembered the dream with unusual clarity, and on further reflection I realized it was possible to measure azimuths and elevations of landmarks that way. Any sight reduction method can be used. With traditional paper and pencil techniques, begin with a plotting sheet. True north takes the place of the prime meridian. The estimated elevation and azimuth of the landmark are the dead reckoning latitude and longitude. In this application, time and position are known, so the celestial body's azimuth and refracted altitude are also known. In the sight reduction these become "GHA" and "declination". For observed altitude, use 90 minus the sextant angle. The sight reduction will yield azimuth and intercept. "Azimuth" is actually the position angle (in a horizontal coordinate system) of the body with respect to the landmark. But on the plotting sheet it's equivalent to computed azimuth. Elevation angles determined by this method are affected by terrestrial refraction. That's not necessarily a bad thing. It might be interesting to analyze the variability of terrestrial refraction. If the landmark is a distant isolated light you can observe all night with a wide choice of stars.