NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
From: Antoine Couëtte
Date: 2017 Nov 5, 00:46 -0700
RE : http://fer3.com/arc/m2.aspx/Where-world-am-I-RonJones-nov-2017-g40582
and : http://fer3.com/arc/m2.aspx/Where-world-am-I-Dekker-nov-2017-g40585
Dear Herman and Dear Ron,
Thanks to both of you for your interesting contributions.
To you Herman since from reprocessing the Mirfak - Canopus - Peacock topocentric heights subsequently "reverse engineered" from Ron’s published geocentric heights you got a very good end result this time, extremely close from Ron’s published position. So … the TI89 StarPilot Software automatically performs refraction corrections. This is a very good point.
And to you Ron for the info on your https://www.uspsd16.org website and for its very interesting CelNav related documentation. I wish I had such wonderful tools at my hands and fingertips - as this one of yours, or Andrés' or Peter's or Paul's - when learning CelNav by the end of the last Millenium. Warmest Congratulations then ! I can also see that all your Stars apparent coordinates are currently quite accurate, to much better than one arc-second. Wow ! :-)
Once again Jean Meeus' ASTRONOMICAL ALGORITHMS book has proven a gold mine to whoever wishes to program an extensive CelNav package including Ephemeris.
One of the greatest benefits of spreadsheets / calculators has been to make linear regressions affordable and easy or - even more expeditiously - to simply retain the observations average values which mathematically belong to such linear regressions, which again is quite visible on Ron's plots. Sights averaging brings a definite accuracy improvement.
Well done again !
Have a great day !
Kermit