NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
From: Frank Reed
Date: 2015 Apr 3, 12:14 -0700
Hi Bob, You wrote:
"What is the rationale behind the use of LHA in sight reduction rather than the meridian angle, per se? I am presuming there is either a logical or historical rationale, but can't imagine what it would be."
I think it's just techno 'bloat'. The subject of celestial navigation became HR (highly ritualized) and OOWA (obscenely overloaded with acronyms) in the latter half of the twentieth century, like many military and engineering sub-fields. Everybody wants to sound like a NASA rocket-man, and the English language has been butchered as a result (other languages mostly following in lock-step). Myself, I make no distinction between LHA and t except when specifically teaching or discussing methods that explicitly depend on that distinction. In fact, I avoid "t" completely, if at all possible. I would prefer not to use LHA since acronyms are intrinsically evil. But we are already stuck with GHA and SHA so one more in the same family does no harm, I guess. I try to explain that LHA, for the Sun, is "sundial time in degrees". If the LHA is 45° that's the same thing as saying that the Sun is three hours from the meridian or saying that a sundial would show 3pm (or 9am). Maybe I should use an acronym for "sundial time degrees". Hmmm... STD? No. Bad connotations! I'll stick with LHA.
Frank Reed
ReedNavigation.com
Conanicut Island USA