Glossary
altitude
angle. Angle above the observer's astronomical horizon. Equivalently, 90° minus the angle between an object and the observer's zenith. An object on the astronomical horizon has an altitude of 0°. An object midway between has an altitude of 45°. An object overhead has an altitude of 90°.
astronomical horizon
An ideal flat and level horizon. A great circle surrounding the observer, 90° off of the zenith. The definition of the astronomical horizon is independent of and not affected by any mountains or other obstructions visible from the observer's position. At The Solar Almanac, calculations of sunrise, sunset, moonrise, moonset, etc. ignore local obstructions and so are defined in terms of your astronomical horizon. Compare horizon.
azimuth
angle. A compass direction, expressed as an angle: 0° = North, 90° = East, 180° = South, 270° = West. 45° = Northeast, and so on.
In graphics at The Solar Almanac, the horizon is labeled with azimuth numbers and the compass points N, NE, E, SE, S, SW, W, and NW. [example graphic]
color codes
Color codes indicate the lighting conditions in effect at the time of each event:
Sunlight: Events occurring in the daytime are shown on a white background.
Moonlight: Events occurring at night but under moonlight are shown on a dim blue background.
Starry Night: Events occurring at night with no Moon are shown on a black background.
culmination
event. The time and event when any object reaches its highest altitude (least zenith distance) for the day (or roughly a one-day period). As the Earth turns under the stars, each object in the heavens reaches a high point and low point above and below the observer, roughly daily; these events are called the upper and lower culminations of that object.

Highest Culmination: Here "highest" means "higher than yesterday's and also higher than tomorrow's." It is what mathematicians call a "local maximum": a high, but not necessarily a record high.

Lowest Upper Culmination: a lowest high. What mathematicians call a "local minimum." See Highest Culmination.

→ In The Solar Almanac, a highest culmination which occurs between sunset and sunrise (i.e., while the Sun is down) is called a Greatest Nocturnal Altitude event.

declination
angle. Just as the Earth is divided by parallels of latitude, the sky is divided by parallels of declination. Declination is measured in degrees. Objects at the poles, like the North Star (declination 90°) barely move when viewed from Earth. Objects on the celestial equator, like Orion's Belt (declination 0°) rise due east and set due west. Every visible star has a precisely known declination. Compare right ascension.
elongation
angle. The angle between the centers of two objects, as seen or measured by an observer. Elongation is an apparent distance, not a true distance; when one object passes behind another, the elongation between them is zero, even though the distance between the objects is not. Compare Distance, Apogee, Perigee, Aphelion, and Perihelion.

Elongation is not heavily dependent on your latitude; compare Greatest Nocturnal Altitude.

geocentric
adj. Means "as seen or measured from the center of the Earth." Implies that location affects the event's apparent time or angle(s), and that observers at other locations will not see the same event, or will see it at a different time. Compare topocentric.

Conversely, may imply that the observer's position is irrelevant. For example, the exact times of perigee and perihelion are not at all affected by your choice of viewpoint.

greatest nocturnal altitude
event. The date and time when an object is at its highest (excluding the daylight hours). The date and time when the object is at its highest for nighttime viewing. See also culmination.

Example: Suppose Venus rises at 4 AM this week and is still rising when the Sun comes up. If Venus is 20° high at sunrise today, 21° high at sunrise tomorrow, and back down to 20° high at sunrise the next day, we would say that Venus reaches its greatest nocturnal altitude tomorrow morning at sunrise.

Whenever a planet is at its highest in the night sky, this is generally your best chance to see the planet with a minimum of atmospheric turbulence, cloud cover, and obstructions from trees and mountains.

GNA events occur at one of three times: sunrise, sunset, or at meridian crossing. For outer planets, a GNA event often means the planet is on the meridian when the Sun is on the horizon, and means the planet had been moving nearer to the observer's zenith every night. Altitude, and therefore the date of GNA, are heavily dependent on the observer's latitude.

In 2006, Mercury had six GNA events,
including this one on October 16.
(Horizon is at bottom, rising.)
horizon
n. Unless otherwise stated, "horizon" is short for astronomical horizon. The Solar Almanac does not correct its sunrise and sunset and other predictions to account for the mountains and trees and other obstructions on each observer's skyline.
icons
Many events are labeled with informative icons:
descriptionmeaning
star beside SunEvent occurs within 15° of the Sun; glare may interfere with visibility.
circle below lineNot Visible in Your Area: Event takes place below horizon.
circle above lineVisible in Your Area: Event takes place above horizon.
half circle above linePart Visible in Your Area: Object(s) below horizon during part of this event.
symbol for EarthGeocentric (Event & time computed as if seen from center of Earth)
humanTopocentric (Event & time computed for your exact position)
local maximum
event. A high point in a varying statistic. Not necessarily a record high.
 
Think of a local minimum or local maximum as a seasonal record,
not an all-time record.
local minimum
event. A low point in a varying statistic. Not necessarily a record low.
meridian
n. When used in the phrase "the observer's meridian" and "your meridian," the meridian is the imaginary line on the sky that divides east from west. The meridian is the great circle that passes through the north and south points on your horizon, the zenith, the nadir, and the celestial poles. "Meridians of longitude" are imaginary lines drawn from pole to pole on the Earth; every location has its own meridian of longitude. Astronomers use the meanings of "meridian" somewhat interchangeably: a "meridian" can be visualized as a plane, an infinitely high imaginary north-south wall through your location, which meets both your meridian of longitude and your meridian on the sky.
occultation
event. The passage of one body (such as the Moon or a planet) in front of a visually smaller body (such as a planet or a star). Compare "transit." Exception: Whenever a moon occults the Sun, casting a shadow on the moon's host planet, we call the event an "eclipse," even though technically it fits the definition of occultation. See also Webster's Dictionary.
Polaris
direction and star. The North Star. A certain bright star which sits nearly on the Earth's axis of rotation, and so, appears to never move (much). Polaris has been used as a compass point and navigational aid for hundreds of years. Polaris is overhead when seen from the North Pole; Polaris is on the horizon when seen from the Equator. To find Polaris from your location, look due north, then do a bit of numerical substitution: whatever your latitude is, look that many degrees above the horizon. For example, if your latitude is 40° north, Polaris will always be 40° above the horizontal, and due north.
right ascension
angle. Just as the Earth is divided by meridians of longitude, the sky is divided by meridians of right ascension. Right ascension is usually measured in hours (1 hour = 15°). Every visible star has a precisely known right ascension. Compare declination.
sunrise
event. The moment when the Sun peeks above the astronomical horizon. Not the moment when the Sun's center is on that horizon; also not the moment when the Sun peeks above any mountains or other obstructions visible from the observer's position.
sunset
event. The moment when the last visible bit of the Sun passes below the astronomical horizon. See also sunrise.
topocentric
adj. Means "as seen or measured from your location." Implies that perspective and location affect the event's apparent time or angle(s), and that observers at other locations will not see the same event, or will see it at a different time. Your location affects the apparent positions of nearby objects, such as the Moon and Venus, more than distant objects. Compare geocentric.

• In The Solar Almanac, most elongation and conjunction events (dramatic close encounters between the Moon and planets) are now computed for your exact position. This breaks the tradition of early almanacs, which computed these events approximately, and assumed the observer was standing at the center of the Earth (not a good place to do stargazing, in our opinions). This makes a difference because your position on Earth can cause the Moon to appear as much as one degree off target, due to perspective.

transit
event. The passage of one body (such as a satellite or planet) in front of a visually larger body (such as the Sun, the Moon, or a planet). Compare "occultation." In English and in Latin, the word "transit" refers to the passage of just about anything in front of or across anything else, as when a star crosses the observer's meridian.
twilight
event. Dawn or dusk.
Astronomers recognize three grades of twilight:
literal meaningis in effect whenever:
civil twilighttwilight visible in a citythe sun is 0° to 6° below the horizon
nautical twilighttwilight visible at sea the sun is 6° to 12° below the horizon
astronomical twilighttwilight visible to astrophotographersthe sun is 12° to 18° below the horizon
Astronomical twilight is the period of dusk that begins every evening when the Sun is 12° below the horizon, and ends when the Sun sinks to 18° below the horizon. Also the period of dawn which begins each morning when the Sun is 18° below the horizon, ending when the Sun reaches 12° below the horizon. According to a traditional rule of thumb, "total darkness" is in effect (for photographic purposes) whenever the Sun's center is lower than 18° below the observer's horizon. Note that the 18° figure is an arbitrary number, and assumes clear air. Of course, all changes in sky brightness are gradual over time; dawn and dusk do not suddenly turn on and off like a light bulb. Dawn and dusk can be lengthened (sometimes with spectacular results) by volcanic dust and high cloud banks between the observer and the nearest sunlit place. The author (in New Mexico) once saw a pink dusk that lasted 75 minutes after sunset, probably due to high clouds over Arizona.
zenith
direction. Roughly speaking, the point on the sky above your head. The direction also called "straight up." For a precise definition, see Wikipedia.

 

Concepts: define, definition, definitions, dictionary of astronomy


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