Pagina principale  |  Contatto  

Indirizzo e-mail

Password

Registrati ora!

Hai dimenticato la password?

Secreto Masonico
 
Novità
  Partecipa ora
  Bacheche di messaggi 
  Galleria di immagini 
 File e documenti 
 Sondaggi e test 
  Lista dei Partecipanti
 EL SECRETO DE LA INICIACIÓN 
 Procesos Secretos del Alma 
 Estructura Secreta del Ritual Masónico 
 Los extraños Ritos de Sangre 
 Cámara de Reflexiones 
 
 
  Strumenti
 
General: MERIDIAN (ASTRONOMY) NORTH SOUTH POLE ZENITH NADIR (NORTH SOUTH EAST WEST)
Scegli un’altra bacheca
Argomento precedente  Argomento successivo
Rispondi  Messaggio 1 di 1 di questo argomento 
Da: BARILOCHENSE6999  (Messaggio originale) Inviato: 24/04/2025 15:07

Meridian (astronomy)

Appearance
 
Text
  •  
     
Width
Color (beta)
 
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
The meridian on the celestial sphere. An observer's upper meridian, a semicircle contains their zenith and both celestial poles; the observer's local meridian is the semicircle that passes through their zenith and the north and south points of their horizon.

In astronomy, the meridian is the great circle passing through the celestial poles, as well as the zenith and nadir of an observer's location. Consequently, it contains also the north and south points on the horizon, and it is perpendicular to the celestial equator and horizon. Meridians, celestial and geographical, are determined by the pencil of planes passing through the Earth's rotation axis. For a location not on this axis, there is a unique meridian plane in this axial-pencil through that location. The intersection of this plane with Earth's surface defines two geographical meridians (either one east and one west of the prime meridian, or else the prime meridian itself and its anti-meridian), and the intersection of the plane with the celestial sphere is the celestial meridian for that location and time.

There are several ways to divide the meridian into semicircles. In one approach, the observer's upper meridian extends from a celestial pole and passes through the zenith to contact the opposite pole, while the lower meridian passes through the nadir to contact both poles at the opposite ends. In another approach known as the horizontal coordinate system, the meridian is divided into the local meridian, the semicircle that contains the observer's zenith and the north and south points of their horizon,[1][2] and the opposite semicircle, which contains the nadir and the north and south points of their horizon.

On any given (sidereal) day/night, a celestial object will appear to drift across, or transit, the observer's upper meridian as Earth rotates, since the meridian is fixed to the local horizon. At culmination, the object contacts the upper meridian and reaches its highest point in the sky. An object's right ascension and the local sidereal time can be used to determine the time of its culmination (see hour angle).

The term meridian comes from the Latin meridies, which means both "midday" and "south", as the celestial equator appears to tilt southward from the Northern Hemisphere.

See also

[edit]


Primo  Precedente  Senza risposta  Successivo   Ultimo  

 
©2025 - Gabitos - Tutti i diritti riservati