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Re: Polaris declination
From: Paul Hirose
Date: 2006 May 20, 13:12 -0700
From: Paul Hirose
Date: 2006 May 20, 13:12 -0700
As already explained by George Huxtable, the month to month variation in the declination of Polaris is largely caused by the annual aberration. Let's first examine the declination with respect to the true equator and equinox of date *without* applying aberration. In the table below, the first column of declinations shows a practically constant increase of 17″ per year. This is the effect of precession and nutation, that is, the changing orientation of Earth's axis. (For some point elsewhere on the celestial sphere the geometry could be quite different, possibly resulting in very little change in declination during a year.) In the second column of declinations I have applied annual aberration but not precession and nutation. That is, Earth's axis is held fixed. You can see a cyclic fluctuation, with Polaris returning to the same place after one year. The last column combines both effects. The values here essentially duplicate the original posting. ° ′ ″ ′ ″ ′ ″ 2006 05 +89 17 35 +17 34 +17 34 2006 06 +89 17 36 +17 24 +17 25 2006 07 +89 17 38 +17 17 +17 21 2006 08 +89 17 40 +17 15 +17 20 2006 09 +89 17 41 +17 18 +17 25 2006 10 +89 17 42 +17 25 +17 33 2006 11 +89 17 43 +17 35 +17 44 2006 12 +89 17 44 +17 45 +17 55 2007 01 +89 17 46 +17 53 +18 04 2007 02 +89 17 48 +17 55 +18 08 2007 03 +89 17 50 +17 52 +18 07 2007 04 +89 17 51 +17 44 +18 00 2007 05 +89 17 52 +17 34 +17 51 cfi@licfi.com wrote: > > declination of polaris: > month d m > may 89.17.5 > june 89.17.4 > july 89.17.3 > aug 89.17.3 > sept 89.17.4 > oct 89.17.6 > nov 89.17.7 > dec 89.17.9 > -------2007------ > jan 89.18.1 > feb 89.18.1 > mar 89.18.1 > apr 89.18.0 > may 89.17.8 > june 89.17.7 > july 89.17.6 I'm glad the question was asked. In the process of computing the table, I realized my homemade positional astromomy software has no provision for applying parallax. So I have a project to work on this weekend. Fortunately, Polaris has a parallax of only .008 arc seconds. Like all stars, Polaris also has "proper motion", a slow drift in its position relative to a space-fixed coordinate system. My table does include that, but it's too tiny to be apparent at 1 second precision.