Two On A Big Ocean The Story of the First Circumnavigation
of the Pacific Basin
in a Small Sailing Ship


      

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Re: Lunars

From: Bill (no email)
Date: Mon Dec 05 2005 - 20:56:34 EST

  • Next message: Mike Hannibal: "Re: Lunars"

    > This evening walking back from the supermarket I
    > noticed a fine opportunity for some lunars - the
    > crescent moon close to Venus...

    Mike

    You encouraged me to take advantage of Venus for some lunars. Downside, it
    was 11d F here in West Lafayette, IN. (N 40 27.7, W 86 55.7)

    Made 4 observations between 6:35 pm and 6:45:35 pm EST, Nov 5 (local date).

    I preset the first observation for a slightly exaggerated overlap (right
    side of Venus touching the moons right edge), popped out the door and then
    did a set-and-wait, noting the time when Venus appeared to be split. Then
    popped in and conformed the reading and recorded the time.

    I had precalculated an increase of approx. 0.4' per minute, so repeated the
    above 3 more times, did an IE check, and ran the results on Frank's site.

    Observation Error
    #1 -0.2'
    #2 -0.1'
    #3 -0.1'
    #4 -0.2'

    #1 and #2 with neutral-density shade over moon and light green over Venus:
    #3 and #4 with neutral-density and light-green shade over moon and light
    green over Venus.

    I was pretty pleased, but then the separation was only in the upper 15d
    range, so relatively easy. I was somewhat surprised all were under. Coming
    from overlap I would have thought I might have seen Venus split by the
    moon's rim a bit too soon, and have been slightly over.

    While doing the observations I remembered one other little "trick" I use,
    especially when measuring star-to-star separation. If you notice while
    doing IE checks with a faint star (when one image is still above/below the
    other) if you move the sextant slightly left or right, one will appear
    dimmer and the other brighter (with a split horizon mirror only). Moving
    the images a scosh right or left is nice way to "fine tune" the brightness
    relationship between two bodies.

    Good luck

    Bill


  • Next message: Mike Hannibal: "Re: Lunars"



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