Did you mean: sidereal time (unit – in astronomy), sidereal

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sidereal time


n.

Time based on the rotation of the earth with reference to the background of stars.


 
 
Sci-Tech Encyclopedia: Sidereal time

One of several kinds of time scales used in astronomy, whose primary application is as part of the coordinate system to locate objects in the sky. It is also the basis for determining the solar time used in everyday living.

The common measurements of time are based on the motions of the Earth that most affect everyday life: Earth's rotation on its axis, and revolution in orbit around the Sun. Objects in the sky reflect these motions and appear to move westward, crossing the meridian each day. A particular object or point is chosen as a marker, and the interval between its successive crossings of the local meridian is defined to be a day, divided into 24 equal parts called hours. The actual length of the day for comparison between systems depends on the reference object chosen. The time of day is reckoned by the angular distance around the sky that the reference object has moved westward since it last crossed the meridian. In fact, the angular distance west of the meridian is called the hour angle. See also Meridian.

The reference point for marking sidereal time is the vernal equinox, one of the two points where the planes of the Earth's Equator and orbit appear to intersect on the celestial sphere. The sidereal day is the interval of time required for the hour angle of the equinox to increase by 360°. One rotation of the Earth with respect to the Sun is a little longer, because the Earth has moved in its orbit as it rotates and hence must turn approximately 361° to complete a solar day. A sidereal year is the time required for the mean longitude of the Sun to increase 360°, or for the Sun to make one circuit around the sky with respect to a fixed reference point. See also Earth rotation and orbital motion.


 
Columbia Encyclopedia: sidereal time
(ST), time measured relative to the fixed stars; thus, the sidereal day is the period during which the earth completes one rotation on its axis so that some chosen star appears twice on the observer's celestial meridian. Because the earth moves in its orbit about the sun, the sidereal day is about 4 min shorter than the solar day (see solar time). Thus, a given star will appear to rise 4 min earlier each night, so that different stars are visible at different times of the year. The local sidereal time of an observer is equal to the hour angle of the vernal equinox.


 
WordNet: sidereal time
Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has one meaning:

Meaning #1: measured by the diurnal motion of stars


 
Wikipedia: sidereal time
For the novel Sidereal Time see Christopher Meredith.

Sidereal time is a measure of the position of the Earth in its rotation around its axis. A sidereal day is, simply put, the time needed for Earth to complete one rotation around its axis, relative to the stars.

Sidereal time

Sidereal time is time measured by the apparent diurnal motion of the vernal equinox, which is very close to, but not identical with, the motion of stars. They differ by the precession of the vernal equinox relative to the stars.

Sidereal time is defined as the hour angle of the vernal equinox. When the meridian of the vernal equinox is directly overhead, local sidereal time is 00:00. Greenwich Sidereal time is the hour angle of the vernal equinox at the prime meridian at Greenwich, England; local values differ according to longitude. When one moves eastward 15° in longitude, sidereal time is larger by one hour (note that it wraps around at 24 hours). Unlike computing local solar time, differences are counted to the accuracy of measurement, not just in whole hours. Greenwich sidereal time and UT1 differ from each other by a constant rate (GST=1.00273790935×UT1).[1] Sidereal time is used at astronomical observatories because sidereal time makes it very easy to work out which astronomical objects will be observable at a given time. Objects are located in the night sky using right ascension and declination relative to the celestial equator (analogous to longitude and latitude on Earth), and when sidereal time is equal to an object's right ascension, the object will be at its highest point in the sky, or culmination, at which time it is best placed for observation, as atmospheric extinction is minimised.


Sideral time and solar time

Sidereal time vs solar time. Above left, a distant star (the small red circle) and the Sun are at culmination, on the local meridian. Centre: only the distant star is at culmination (a mean sidereal day). Right: few minutes later the Sun is on the local meridian again. A solar day is complete.
Sidereal time vs solar time. Above left, a distant star (the small red circle) and the Sun are at culmination, on the local meridian. Centre: only the distant star is at culmination (a mean sidereal day). Right: few minutes later the Sun is on the local meridian again. A solar day is complete.

Solar time is measured by the apparent diurnal motion of the sun, and local noon in solar time is defined as the moment when the sun is at its highest point in the sky (exactly due south in the northern hemisphere and due north in the southern hemisphere). The average time taken for the sun to return to its highest point is 24 hours.

During the time needed by the Earth to complete a rotation around its axis (a sidereal day), the earth moves a short distance (around 1°) along its orbit around the sun. Therefore, after a sidereal day, the Earth still needs to rotate a small extra angular distance before the sun reaches its highest point. A solar day is, therefore, around 4 minutes longer than a sidereal day.

The stars, however, are so far away that the earth's movement along its orbit makes a generally negligible difference to their apparent direction (see, however parallax), and so they return to their highest point in a sidereal day. A sidereal day is around 4 minutes shorter than a mean solar day.

Another way to see this difference is to notice that, relative to the stars, the Sun appears to move around the Earth once per year. Therefore, there is one less solar day per year than there are sidereal days. This makes a sidereal day a factor of approximately 365.25/366.25 shorter than the 24 hour solar day, giving approximately 23 hours, 56 minutes, 4.1 seconds (86,164.1 seconds).

Precession effects

The Earth rotation is not simply a simple rotation around an axis that would always remain parallel to itself. The Earth's rotation axis itself rotates about a second axis, orthogonal to the Earth orbit, taking about 25,800 years to perform a complete rotation. This phenomenon is called the precession of the equinoxes. Because of this precession, the stars appear to move around the Earth in a manner more complicated than a simple constant rotation.

For this reason, to simplify the description of Earth orientation in astronomy and geodesy, it is conventional to describe Earth rotation relative to a frame which is itself precessing slowly. In this reference frame, Earth rotation is close to constant, but the stars appear to rotate slowly with a period of about 25,800 years. It is also in this reference frame that the tropical year, the year related to the Earth's seasons, represents one orbit of the Earth around the sun. The precise definition of a sidereal day is the time taken for one rotation of the Earth in this precessing reference frame.

Exact duration and its variation

A mean sidereal day is about 23h 56m 4.1s in length. However, due to variations in the rotation rate of the Earth the rate of an ideal sidereal clock deviates from any simple multiple of a civil clock. In practice, the difference is kept track of by the difference UTCUT1, which is measured by radio telescopes and kept on file and available to the public at the IERS and at the United States Naval Observatory.

Given a tropical year of 365.242190402 days from Simon et al.[2] this gives a sidereal day of 86,400×365.242190402/366.242190402, or 86,164.09053 seconds.

According to Aoki et al.,[3] an accurate value for the sidereal day at the beginning of 2000 is (1/1.002737909350795) times a mean solar day of 86,400 seconds, which gives 86,164.090530833 seconds. For times within a century of 1984, the ratio only alters in its 11th decimal place. This web based sidereal time calculator uses a truncated ratio of 1/1.00273790935.

Because this is the period of rotation in a precessing reference frame, it is not directly related to the mean rotation rate of the Earth in an inertial frame, which is given by ω=2π/T where T is the slightly longer stellar day given by Aoki et al.[4] as 86,164.09890369732 seconds. This can be calculated by noting that ω is the magnitude of the vector sum of the rotations leading to the sidereal day and the precession of that rotation vector. In fact, the period of the Earth's rotation varies on hourly to interannual timescales by around a millisecond [5], together with a secular increase in length of day of about 2.3 milliseconds per century which mostly results from slowing of the Earth's rotation by tidal friction. [6]

See also

References

  1. ^ P. Kenneth Seidelmann, ed., Explanatory supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, (Mill Valley, Cal.: University Science Books, 1992) pp. 52 and 698.
  2. ^ Simon, J. L., P. Bretagnon, J. Chapront, M. Chapront-Touzé, G Francou and J. Laskar: Numerical expressions for precession formulas and mean elements for the moon and the planets. Astronomy and Astrophysics 282(2), 663-683, 1994.
  3. ^ Aoki, S., B. Guinot, G. H. Kaplan, H. Kinoshita, D. D. McCarthy and P. K. Seidelmann: The new definition of Universal Time. Astronomy and Astrophysics 105(2), 359-361, 1982.
  4. ^ Aoki, S., B. Guinot, G. H. Kaplan, H. Kinoshita, D. D. McCarthy and P. K. Seidelmann: The new definition of Universal Time. Astronomy and Astrophysics 105(2), 359-361, 1982.
  5. ^ Hide, R., and J. O. Dickey: Earth's variable rotation. Science 253, 629-637, 1991.
  6. ^ Stephenson, F.R.: Historical eclipses and Earth's rotation. Cambridge University Press, 1997, 557pp.

External links


 
 

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Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Sci-Tech Encyclopedia. McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of Science and Technology. Copyright © 2005 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
WordNet. WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Sidereal time" Read more

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