432 pgs, 1998, Willmann-Bell Inc. ISBN 978-0943396613
Jean Meeus, a widely acclaimed authority on celestial calculations, has compiled the most useful algorithms and computations for astronomers to support their observations. Instead of relying just on formulae developed before 1920, this book includes explicit equations based on machine motion-modeling methods perfected at JPL and the US Naval Observatory over the past decade, techniques that until now remained out of reach for civilians. This handy reference for understanding the applications of celestial mechanics includes a fully worked numerical example with each algorithm and makes the equations understandable for novices.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Hints and Tips
- About Accuracy
- Interpolation
- Curve Fitting
- Iteration
- Sorting Numbers
- Julian Day
- Date of Easter
- Dynamical Time and Universal Time
- The Earth's Globe
- Sidereal Time at Greenwich
- Transformation of Coordinates
- The Parallactic Angle
- Rising, Transit, and Setting
- Atmospheric Refraction
- Angular Separation
- Planetary Conjunctions
- Bodies in Straight Line
- Smallest Circle Containing Three Celestial Bodies
- Precession
- Nutation and the Obliquity of the Ecliptic
- Apparent Place of a Star
- Reduction of Ecliptical Elements from one Equinox to another one
- Solar Coordinates
- Rectangular Coordinates of the Sun
- Equinoxes and Solstices
- Equation of Time
- Ephemeris for Physical Observations of the Sun
- Equation of Kepler
- Elements of the Planetary Orbits
- Positions of the Planets
- Elliptic Motion
- Parabolic Motion
- Near-Parabolic Motion
- The Calculation of Some Planetary Phenomena
- Pluto
- Planets in Perihelion and Aphelion
- Passages Through the Nodes
- Correction for Parallax
- Illuminated Fraction of the Disk and Magnitude of a Planet
- Ephemeris for Physical Observations of Mars
- Ephemeris for Physical Observations of Jupiter
- Positions of the Satellites of Jupiter
- The Ring of Saturn
- Position of the Moon
- Illuminated Fraction of the Moon's Disk
- Phases of the Moon
- Perigee and Apogee of the Moon
- Passages of the Moon through the Nodes
- Maximum Declinations of the Moon
- Ephemeris for Physical Observations of the Moon
- Eclipses
- Semidiameters of the Sun, Moon, and Planets
- Stellar Magnitudes
- Binary Stars
- Calculation of a Planar Sundial
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