T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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554.1 | basics | OCCAM::FANEUF | | Wed May 13 1987 16:05 | 55 |
| Phew! People have written THICK books which answer these questions
and the questions which arise from them. But I can summarize a few
answers (and gladly accept corrections from the more expert).
The basic operation of celestial navigation is to measure the altitude
of a known body (sun, moon, planets, or one of the 57 navigational
stars) above your horizon at a precisely known time. Then, knowing
the time, to figure out the position of that body on the earth (the
point it is 'directly above') at that time. It is then possible
(usually using tables) to figure out your distance from that position.
This establishes a 'line of position' - a line which is perpendicular
to the great circle arc connecting your position and the body's
position, and running through your position. This line is in fact
a circle drawn on the earth's surface, but since its radius is usually
enormous, it can be treated as a straight line in your local vicinity.
If you can compute three such lines (from observations of three
different bodies), then their intersection indicates your position.
This simplifies the process. The details have been tabulated using
several different systems in ways which aim to reduce either the
amount of tabular space required, the difficulty of using the system,
or both. The tables correct for the difference between sidereal
(real rotational period) and statue days.
The choice of what celestial bodies to shoot is one of the fun parts
of celestial navigation. It depends on what will be visible, your
abilities to find and take good altitudes of the bodies, and what
we give good LOP intersections (three bodies close together give
a poor position intersection, same as when taking RDF or hand bearing
compass bearings). People are likely to use (always assuming visibility)
1. A noon sight of the sun - because it's easy and gives a latitude
essentially directly. Traditionally very important - the
day at see began with the noon sight. That was when local
was changed to coincide with the sun (no standard times!)
2. A morning or evening twilight sight of as many celestial
bodies as possible. Venus is real good if visible. There
are some good stars, particularly if you have learned to
identify them. The moon as a last resort, and the sun as
a real last resort (both are changing altitude pretty fast,
and other effects combine to give questionable sights unless
you're pretty experienced).
The last basic measurement required is a good value of time which
can be converted to GMT. The chronometer has been supplying this
for many years now, and modern yacht-oriented chronometers are,
of course, digitized. Many use a combination of time signals and
a good digital wristwatch. Converting time to distance, one second
equals 1/4 nautical mile, so time accuracy is important.
There's lots, lots more, and this summary is off the top of my head.
More expert noters are invited to correct and expand.
Ross Faneuf
|
554.2 | a correction | PULSAR::BERENS | Alan Berens | Wed May 13 1987 17:28 | 22 |
| A correction:
When you measure the altitude of a celestial body (in degrees and
usually with a sextant), you are determining how far you are from the
geographic position of that body.
The line of position is actually a great circle drawn on the earth's
surface with the geographic position of the celestial body as the center
of the circle. Your position is anywhere on that circle. As was pointed
out in .1, the radius of the circle is usually so large that the line of
position may be treated as a straight line on the plotting sheet or
chart (this is not true when the celestial body is nearly overhead).
Since finding position accurately depends on measuring the time of the
sight to the nearest second, it doesn't really matter which celestial
body you use for a sight. The sun and moon, being big, are a great deal
easier to use, especially with a cheap sextant with poor optics and in
bad weather, than a little star or planet. Besides, the sun and moon are
easy to recognize, the stars and planets aren't.
Alan
|
554.3 | The more, the merrier | BCSE::SUITS | | Thu May 14 1987 06:58 | 87 |
| Re: .0
The issue of how many bodies to use involves the desired degree
of both precision and accuracy of (confidence in) the result. As
mentioned in .1 and .2, an altitude observation of a single body
will yield a line of position. This result is neither precise,
since you could be anywhere along the line, nor of known
accuracy.
Simultaneous observations of two bodies will yield two lines of
position which will (usually) cross at some point near your
estimated position. This is a two-body fix, and is a precise
position but one of unknown accuracy. If one or both of the
observations is faulty, the lines will still cross but will do so
at the wrong place.
Three lines of position will form a triangle. If your
observations are good and your arithmetic is error free, then the
triangle will be small and the center of it will represent your
position. A triangle a mile on a side is as good as most
navigators ever get, even under ideal conditions. This result is
both precise and (probably) accurate. If your observations are
bad, the triangle will be large and you will know that the
accuracy of the indicated position is doubtful.
The more lines you have, the greater the precision (assuming
random errors) of the (averaged) result and the greater the
degree of confidence you can assume. Overcome by a fit of
swaggering bravado, I once shot a six body fix during evening
twilight. Unfortunately, I exhausted the batteries on my
calculator trying to reduce all the data.
What makes this celestial stuff something of an art form is that
to measure the altitude of a celestial body you need to be able
to see both the body and the horizon. During the daytime, when
the horizon is visible, it's rare to have more than one celestial
body available. During the night, when there are plenty of
celestial bodies, you can't see the horizon. Stars and planets
are therefore only usable during a ten minute window each morning
and evening twilight, and then only if the sky is clear, etc.,
etc.
Selection of which body(s) to use is largely a matter of
availability and personal preference. As a gentle correction to
.1, they all (the Sun, the Moon, the four planets and the 57
stars - nothing else exists) move around the Earth at about the
same speed. Some navigators avoid using the Moon since it is a
lot closer than the others and reducing the sight requires a
couple more steps to correct for hourly change in semi-diameter
and parallax.
As a matter of practicality, most modern navigators just shoot
the Sun at different times during the day and advance the lines
of position along the Dead Reckoning track to obtain a running
fix. Purists consider such practice a reprehensible cop-out but
we're a dying breed. In any case, the increased possibility of
error is acceptable since if you need to know your position
closer than 10 miles it's usually because you're trying to hit
something or you're trying to miss something and, in either case,
once you're within 10 miles of whatever it is, you should be able
to *see* it so you don't need the sextant at all.
There are exceptions to all of this - one is that you can take a
series of measurements on a single body during it's meridian
transit (when it passes due North or South of you) which is when
it reaches maximum altitude, stops rising and begins to set.
Plot all the altitudes versus time, strike a curve through the
points, and try to interpolate the peak altitude and the time at
which it occurred. The observed altitude can be converted to
your latitude and the time can be converted to your longitude.
Presto! Unfortunately, the curve is likely to be pretty flat, so
the exact time of the transit will be hard to pick out.
... and yes, a Sidereal day is 4 minutes shorter than a Solar
day. However, none of us navigators believe that Copernican
fantasy about the Earth revolving around the Sun (Indeed! - the
man must have spent his life in a cave) so the Nautical almanac
is keyed to the Mean Sun, that is, where the Sun would be if it
revolved around the Earth (which it does, as anyone can plainly
see) at an even rate (which it doesn't). The common name for
this is Coordinated Universal Time (abbreviated UTC as a
concession to the French) which replaced the older term Greenwich
Mean Time (GMT).
|
554.4 | Is HO208 still viable? | DPDMAI::CLEVELAND | Grounded on The Rock | Tue Nov 09 1993 18:13 | 23 |
| I thought I'd revive this note with a question on Celestrial Navigation
tables....
I am currently teaching myself Celestrial Navigation using the HO229
tables for sight reduction. I was given a book, printed in 1975
on using HO208 for sight reductions. In reviewing the book, it looks a
bit easier and ALL the tables are in one fairly thin book. Wondering if
it would ever become outdated, I began searching through the tables for
a correction table with dates on it. The only one I can find is one for
the Planet Jupiter, with corrections from 1975-2000. From this, I am
deducing that the table may work until the year 2000 and then become a
paperweight.
From a curiosity standpoint though, I'm wondering if anyone has any
info on HO208 and if it is still viable? Does Bowditch have any
reference to it? I figure I'll stick with the 228 tables for now,
primarily because I've got a great book I'm using that makes sense to
me and it uses them. But once I understand what I'm doing, I can see
where learning the 208 method would sure cut down on the poundage of
tables required for sight reduction in absence of a nav calculator.
Comments anyone?
Robert
|
554.5 | HO229, not 228 | DPDMAI::CLEVELAND | Grounded on The Rock | Tue Nov 09 1993 18:14 | 2 |
| correction to .4..
Please read HO229 everytime you see HO228. Confusion from a neophyte...
|
554.6 | | MASTR::BERENS | Alan Berens | Wed Nov 10 1993 08:46 | 16 |
| The sight reduction tables are good forever (unless a calculation
mistake is found) as they are nothing more than solutions to the
spherical trigonometry used in celestial navigation. What does change
yearly is the Nautical Almanac.
If you are willing to trust electronics a bit, it is quite simple to
program a Hewlett Packard calculator to do sight reductions without the
need for hand arithmetic or the interpolations needed to use the tables.
I wrote such a program for a HP 32S (<$100) that works quite nicely and
is, I think, much easier than the tables. I keep all the input data in
registers so I can check that I entered it correctly. Still, not quite
failsafe, so I carry the tables, too.
Alan
PS If anyone is interested, I'll post the program.
|
554.7 | Real navigation to confirm the GPS positions... | 3D::SEARS | Paul Sears, ML01-2, P38c, 223-0212 | Wed Nov 10 1993 12:35 | 16 |
| By all means post the program.
Also note that the formulas can be fairly easily used with any
scientific calculator. The more adressable memories the better.
The new Nautical Almanacs have their own tables in them such that you
don't need external reduction tables. The method is more difficult than
HO249 but probably easier than HO209. Also i think Reeds has a reduced
almanac and reduction tables too.
My personal choice would be a programmable (and programmed) caculator
and a few backup normal scientific calculators. Plus a Nautical
Almanac.
paul
|
554.8 | | HAEXLI::PMAIER | | Thu Nov 11 1993 02:46 | 3 |
| The "selected stars" is only valid for 5 years.
Peter
|
554.9 | Here's a book reference | RANGER::TELSEY | Steve, DTN 226-2477 | Thu Nov 11 1993 09:12 | 11 |
|
Robert,
You might want to keep your eyes open for a copy of Self-Contained
Celestial Navigation with H.O 208 by John Letcher, Jr. It contains
H.O. 208 as an appendix as a bonus.
H.O. 208 is a handy volume to have in your abandon ship (scramble)
bag. It sure takes up less room than H.O. 214, 229, or 249.
Steve
|
554.10 | That's the book! | DPDMAI::CLEVELAND | Grounded on The Rock | Thu Nov 11 1993 14:54 | 17 |
| Steve,
This is precisely the book I am referring to! As I mentioned, my volume
was copywrited in 1975, so I was curious about it's continued long-term
usefullness. What I am reading from the replies are that it is still
viable, minus the "selected stars" section.
Alan, please post your program. I've got an HP 95LX that I'd like to
program with your offer.
The goal is to learn Celestrial well and understand why/how the steps
are done manually to get the proper results. I then would feel a lot
more comfortable using a calculator to do the same if I knew that the
first time it fell off the nav station and broke, I could still
navigate my way home with tables and sight reduction tables.
Robert
|
554.11 | Celestial Navigation | MDCRAB::WARSHAW | | Mon Aug 01 1994 14:36 | 14 |
| Alan never did publicly post his program but I would guess that it is
based on the Law of Cosines...
I am very much interested in celestial navigation and would like to
discuss it further (e.g. I am trying to apply the Spline function to a
meridian transit).
Is anyone interested in a pregrammable calculater that has navigational
algorithms? Original cost $274. Offered for $150/obo.
I am always interested in any text dealing with CN.
bernie
|