NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Longitude by lunar and solar transit
From: Geoffrey Kolbe
Date: 2014 Jun 02, 09:31 +0100
From: Geoffrey Kolbe
Date: 2014 Jun 02, 09:31 +0100
On 02/06/2014 02:06, Frank Reed wrote: > Earlier this evening, Hanno Ix and I were discussing a method for finding longitude that was used historically by land-based astronomers. You time the difference between the transit of the Sun and the transit of the Moon (either the leading or trailing limbs of each body). How accurately could you do this with simple tools and basic math today? Does it depend on an exact meridian observation, or if we're a degree or two out of line with the true meridian (but the same for both bodies) can we still get an accurate longitude? And can anyone point us to a write-up of this technique from the early 19th century? Is it in Chauvenet somewhere? Observations like this were certainly used to get longitudes of observatories in remote locations in the era before the telegraph. Anyone else interested in resurrecting this technique? --just for fun, of course! > > -FER "Hints to Travellers" is a good book to see what methods were used to find absolute time in temporary or small observatories around the end of the 19th century. This method is not mentioned. The Moon occulting a star is cited as the best method for determining absolute time. This sounds like a fun project though, and ideal for a theodolite. I will give it a bash when the next sunny day comes along and the Moon is "above the earth" diurnally. Geoffrey Kolbe.