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#87987 - 03/11/07 12:58 AM Re: HillBilly to HillBilly [Re: wildman800]
JCWohlschlag Offline
Old Hand

Registered: 11/26/06
Posts: 724
Loc: Sterling, Virginia, United Sta...
I cannot find star sets in or around Cygnus that would resemble the ASCII art provided. I have included a Stellarium screenshot of that area of the sky for reference.

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#87991 - 03/11/07 01:44 AM Re: celestial navigation [Re: DLR]
wildman800 Offline
Carpal Tunnel

Registered: 11/09/06
Posts: 2847
Loc: La-USA
Another thing that my slow moving brain just received from the Archive Databank - I bought a star chart at the local bookstore (national chain type) that is very easy to use and has the stars of each constellation linked together. It's very easy to use and I have enjoyed mine immensely!

Remember, senility sucks!!!
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#87994 - 03/11/07 02:25 AM Re: celestial navigation [Re: wildman800]
Alex Offline
Old Hand

Registered: 03/01/07
Posts: 1034
Loc: -
As a piece of the survival gear I'd recommend this kind of charts: http://www.lawrencehallofscience.org/StarClock/skywheel.html

(Thanks to Blast for the site). This chart could be used as the best Polaris finder, star clock, calendar and compass (at night of course).


Edited by Alex (03/11/07 02:26 AM)

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#87996 - 03/11/07 02:49 AM Re: celestial navigation [Re: Alex]
wildman800 Offline
Carpal Tunnel

Registered: 11/09/06
Posts: 2847
Loc: La-USA
That is basically the same chart that I was talking about in my earlier post.
_________________________
QMC, USCG (Ret)
The best luck is what you make yourself!

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#88039 - 03/11/07 08:15 PM Re: HillBilly to HillBilly [Re: Alex]
Micah513 Offline
Member

Registered: 07/18/06
Posts: 178
Loc: Springfield, MO
The partial kite (or at least what my brain perceives as a partial kite) is Orion's Belt & Sword. It is a couple degrees off from true north and I didn't do a very good job of drawing it up from memory as I got it backwards, but keep in my I said this was coming from a Hillbilly's perspective & off the top of my head from memory which is fading in my old age crazy
And if I was out in the brush & looked up into the sky I would still pick it out right away.

Here is probably closer to what I should have posted. I do know the tail is kind of a fuzzy glow of several stars to the naked eye.


-----------North-------------
-----------------------------
-----------------------------
--------------*--------------
----------*------------------
------*--------------*-------
-----------------------------
-----------------------------
-------------*---------------
--------------*--------------
--------------*--------------


Here is another image Belt & Sword

Or better yet go to Google. Type in "Orion's belt" and click on images. There are some cool ones out there. The belt is so bright that even if it is hazy sky it is still findable.



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#88041 - 03/11/07 09:00 PM Re: HillBilly to HillBilly [Re: Micah513]
Alex Offline
Old Hand

Registered: 03/01/07
Posts: 1034
Loc: -
Well, the Orion's belt is exactly on the equator of the celestial sphere. So it's 90 deg. off the Polaris. Also the size of the "dagger" (which is really pointing to Polaris) is so tiny - you can cover it with your thumb. I doubt it's a good guide to Polaris. It's more like an indicator to look into opposite direction for Big Dipper or Cassiopeia.


Edited by Alex (03/11/07 09:02 PM)

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#88054 - 03/11/07 10:53 PM Re: HillBilly to HillBilly [Re: Alex]
Micah513 Offline
Member

Registered: 07/18/06
Posts: 178
Loc: Springfield, MO
I can spot Orion's belt very quickly & then I'm off to the races. Overall it may not be the best tool to use, but works for me.

Do you have other recommendations for us amateurs?

(Pointing me to a website that has a thousand stars & hundreds of connecting lines running every which way isn't going to help me when I need to find Polaris quickly)

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#88057 - 03/11/07 11:21 PM Re: celestial navigation [Re: DLR]
Anonymous
Unregistered


Navigation using the stars is actually reasonable simple and it very simple to get a Latitude position and with a reasonable degree of accuracy. Longitude measurement is slightly more difficult.

Firstly find the star called Polaris. Polaris is easy to find. Polaris always points north if you are in the northern hemisphere. Get your compass out from your PSK and look upwards in the northerly direction. In the northern hemisphere all the other stars rotate around Polaris over the course of the night. A quicker method is to find Ursa Major (Great Bear or as in the UK referred to as the Plough) and then locate the star Merak (the front corner of the plough's blade). In this constellation the nearest brightest star will be Dubhe. Follow the imaginary line these two stars make and here you find the next brightest star in sequence called Polaris. Merak and Dubhe will point to the star Polaris. Once you know how to find the star Polaris using this method you don't even need a compass to start off with.

Secondly to determine you Latitude you just measure then angle or angular separation between the horizon and the star Polaris. To do this you need a sextant. Point the telescope viewer or iron sight of the sextant at the star Polaris and read of the angle. This is your Latitude.
Even a simple bush craft made sextant will get you within + or - 100 miles approximately either way of your true Latitude. A bubble indicator from a spirit level is always handy to have in your PSK together with your hacksaw blade. The bubble indicator will allow the bush craft sextant to be level with the horizon if the horizon is difficult to determine in the dark. The hack saw blade will allow you mark of the ratios of 3,4,5 so as to give you a right angle triangle, which will then give an accurate angular reference measurements of 36.87 and 53.13 degrees. These reference angles can then be accurately subdivided into smaller angles and will allow the construction of a reasonably accurate bush craft sextant. Achievable accuracy could be + or – 1 degrees.

Since accurate time and global navigation were invented in Britain due of the invention of the chronometer or pocket watch by Harrison (Known as H4) in the late 17th century, the reference angle of 0 and 360 degrees is set to the imaginary north south line called the prime meridian which bisects the globe through Greenwich in London.

Longitude is much more difficult to determine as this will require an accurate timepiece, which is set to Greenwich Mean Time or is at least referenced to Greenwich Mean Time GMT or UTC (otherwise known as Universal Time Co-ordinate) and something called a solar ephemeris table.
By measuring the referenced time of the sunrise and sunset together with the time of year and the measured latitude then by looking up the solar ephemeris table a reasonable measurement of latitude can be derived.
Generally having an accurate timepiece is not really a problem especially with today’s modern quartz regulated watches. (It may surprise some that the British Harrison H4 which is over 250 years old will actually keep better time than most contemporary Japanese and Swiss timepieces). Having a solar ephemeris table is not something that most people would have access to in the wilderness.

A simpler less accurate method is to measure the time of the suns zenith (the point at which the sun is the highest in the sky at the longitude to be determined). This can be done using a bush craft sundial. Improved accuracy can be achieved by the use of averaging the time of the each daily sun’s zenith time results.

1 day’s rotation of earth = 360 degrees = 24 hours
15 degrees = 1 hour
1 degree = 1/15th hour = 4 minutes (this will be accurate to again + or – 60 miles approximately)

Measuring the difference in time between local noon and Greenwich noon made it possible to determine longitude. If local noon was 6 hours after Greenwich noon, the latitude will be 90 degrees (6* 15) west of Greenwich.
Because the earth rotates once per day, any given point on the earth's surface travels through a circle of 360 degrees once every 24 hours. Thus, each hour, a given point travels through 15 degrees of longitude (360/24). To determine one's longitude, one compares the time of local noon (when the sun is at its highest point) to the time of noon at a place with a known longitude. The difference in time is converted to the difference in longitude with a fairly simple calculation.
For example, if one hour is equal to 15 degrees, then 6 hours would equal 90 degrees, and 6 hours and 30 minutes would be 97.5 degrees.
If the local sun’s zenith can be fixed within 4 minutes then the location of the longitude to be measured will be between + or – 60 miles approximately of the true longitude.




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#88059 - 03/11/07 11:30 PM Re: HillBilly to HillBilly [Re: Alex]
ironraven Offline
Cranky Geek
Carpal Tunnel

Registered: 09/08/05
Posts: 4642
Loc: Vermont
It gives east-west pretty reliably. Put it to your back, and you are looking north-ish, and you can start looking for other landmarks. (skymarks?)
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When a man dare not speak without malice for fear of giving insult, that is when truth starts to die. Truth is the truest freedom.

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#88060 - 03/11/07 11:57 PM Re: HillBilly to HillBilly [Re: ]
Micah513 Offline
Member

Registered: 07/18/06
Posts: 178
Loc: Springfield, MO
Piece of cake!

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