Astronomers used coordinate systems to find and map
objects. Because Earth's time is not exact,
Astronomers rely on Sidereal time.A sidereal day
is two successive upper meridian crossings by the
Sun of the Vernal Equinox - of course and easier way
to remember this is that a sidereal day is measured
by a complete Earth rotation with respect to the
stars (not the
Sun which would be a standard Solar
day).
Vernal Equinox is when the
Sun passes the
Celestial Equator between the
northern and
southern
hemisphere.
Vernal Equinox is also known as the first day of
Spring - or (around) March 21.
Midnight at the Vernal Equinox is 00:00 hours local
Sidereal time.
It is also important to understand that
Astronomer's often use different times than we are
used to - for example our watches are in sync with
the
Sun. This means that one day is equal to Earth's
rotation with respect to the
Sun. This is called a
Solar day. For more accuracy, Astronomer's use
Sidereal time, Earth's rotation with respect to the
stars. This means that the same constellation
appears at the same place after a complete rotation
of the Earth. When comparing a Solar day to a
Sidereal day, subtract 4 minutes from each other:
Sidereal Day = Solar Day - 4
minutes
This is why the night sky is
different depending on the time of year, they rise 4
minutes earlier each night. So why 4 minutes?
A complete circle is 360°
and Earth orbits the
Sun in 365.25 days, or
about 1° a day.
An Earth rotation is also 360
which is 24 hours (or 1440 minutes). Divide 360°
into 1440 minutes and there is 4 minutes left
over. To match with Sidereal time, the Earth
must rotate 1° more
for the
Sun to appear in the same spot day by
day.
A Sidereal Month is also used, and is the orbit of
the
Moon with respect to the
stars which is 27.3
days. A Synodic Month is the "standard"
Moon orbit
about the Earth - from full
moon to full
moon -
which is 29.5 days.
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