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- From: kleber@husc11.harvard.edu (Gwydden)
- Newsgroups: rec.org.sca
- Subject: Re: Period Calendar Wanted
- Message-ID: <kleber.726004948@husc.harvard.edu>
- Date: 2 Jan 93 20:02:28 GMT
- References: <1992Dec31.162934.22106@pbhya.PacBell.COM><1992Dec31.172333.13978@zia.aoc.nrao
- .edu><1992Dec31.192102.24652@pbhya.PacBell.COM><1992Dec31.231346.5042@zia.ao
- c.nrao.edu> <BRANDON.93Jan2141942@gauss.math.brown.edu>
- Lines: 31
- Nntp-Posting-Host: husc11.harvard.edu
-
- Quoth Simon Santiago de Cordoba:
-
- > A sundial measures where the sun is in it's path across
- > the sky, without regard to how long that path actually takes. When the sun
- > is highest (local noon) the shadow of the gnomon will *always* be at the
- > middle marking (or disappear entirely). When the sun is on the horizon
- > (sunup or sundown) the shadow will always be in the same place, which will
- > depend on the latitude (I think), but not the time of year.
-
- Is that really true? My practical astronomy is probably even rustier than
- yours is, but that doesn't fit with my intuition about how the solar system
- is set up. The earth rotates around its axis, and there's this plane
- perpendicular to this axis, which contains the equator, and which always
- stays parallel, regardless of time-of-year. At the equinoxes, the
- sun lies in this plane; in summer it's on "your" side of the plane
- (north of it for summer in this hemisphere), in winter it's on the other
- side. In which case, at the equinox, the sun rises "due east" (since due
- east is always in that plane), but the time of year most certainly does
- change that!
-
- I *think* it's true that the shadow of the tip of the gnomon, at sunrise,
- will fall in a straight line throughout the year, as will its shadow at
- any other constant fraction of the time between sunrise and sunset, and
- those straight lines are what I thought the lines on your average sundial
- were.
-
- OK, now it's someone else's turn to shot down my geometric intuition...
-
- --Gwydden Lawen I don't have an overactive
- Borough of Duncharloch, Carolingia imagination... I have an
- kleber@husc.harvard.edu underactive reality... --EG
-