United States. Naval Office
Published: 2013-09
Total Pages: 44
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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1880 edition. Excerpt: ...of the stars are counted. This point is the vernal equinox, and its hour-angle is called Sidereal Time. Astronomical clocks, regulated to sidereal time, are called sidereal clocks. A Sidereal Day is the interval of time between the transit oi tne vernal equinox over any meridian, and its next succeeding return to the same meridian. It is about m 56s shorter than the mean solar day; 356J solar days, or a year, being divided into 366J sidereal days. It is divided into 24 hours. The sidereal hours are counted from 0 to 24, commencing with the instant of the passage of the true vernal equinox over the upper meridian, and ending with its return to the same meridian. About March 21st of each year the sidereal clock agrees with tha mean time, or ordinary clock; and it gains on it about 3"' 56' per day, so that at the end of a year it will have gained an entire day, and will again agree with it. Day.--The Civil Day, according to the customs of society, commences at midnight, and comprises twenty-four hours from one midnight to the next following. The hours are counted from 0 to 12 from midnight to noon, after which they are again reckoned from 0 to 12 from noon to midnight. Thus the day is divided into two periods of 12 hours each; the first of which is marked A. M., the last is marked P. M. The Astronomical Day commences at noon on the civil day of the same date. It also comprises twenty-four hours; but they are reckoned from 0 to 24, and from the noon of one day to that of the next following. The astronomical as well as the civil time may be either apparent or mean, according as it is reckoned from apparent noon or from mean noon. The civil day begins twelve hours before the astronomical day; therefore the first period of the civil...