Physics Library
 An open source physics library
Encyclopedia | Forums | Docs | Random | Template Test |  
Login
create new user
Username:
Password:
forget your password?
Main Menu
Sections

Meta

Talkback

Downloads

Information
[parent] example of sidereal time and solar time (Example)

Sidereal Time and Solar Time

The Sun makes a complete circle in the sky approximately every 24 hours, while the stars make a complete circle in the sky in 4 minutes less time, or 23 hours and 56 minutes. This causes the positions of the stars at a given time of day or night to change slightly each day. Since stars rise 4 minutes earlier each day, that works out to about 2 hours per month ( $4 \, minutes \times 30=120 \, minutes \, or \, 2 \, hours$). So, if a particular Constellation rises at sunset during the winter, you can be sure that by the summer, it will rise about 12 hours earlier, with the sunrise, and it will not be so easily visible in the night sky. Let's say that tonight the bright star Sirius rises at 7:00 p.m. from a given location so that by midnight, it is very high in the sky. At what time will Sirius rise in three months?

Solution

In three months' time, Sirius will be rising earlier by:

$\displaystyle 90 \,\, days \times \frac{4 \,\, minutes}{day} = 360 \,\, minutes \,\, or \,\, 6 \,\, hours $

It will rise at about 1:00 p.m. and be high in the sky at around sunset instead of midnight. Sirius is the brightest star in the constellation of Canis Major (the big dog). So, some other constellation will be prominently visible high in the sky at this later date.

This article is a derivative work of the creative commons share alike with attribution in [1].

Bibliography

[1] Fraknoi, Andrew, David Morrison, and Sidney Wolff. The Sky Above. In Astronomy 2e. Houston, Texas : OpenStax, 2022. The Sky Above



"example of sidereal time and solar time" is owned by bloftin.
View style:

This object's parent.

Cross-references: Constellation, works, positions

This is version 1 of example of sidereal time and solar time, born on 2025-03-29.
Object id is 992, canonical name is ExampleOfSiderealTimeAndSolarTime.
Accessed 43 times total.

Classification:
Physics Classification95.10.Km (Ephemerides, almanacs, and calendars)
 45.50.Pk (Celestial mechanics )
 95.10.-a (Fundamental astronomy)
Pending Errata and Addenda
None.
Discussion
Style: Expand: Order:

No messages.

Testing some escape charachters for html category with a generator has an injective cogenerator" now escape ” with "