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Transit instrument

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In astronomy, a transit instrument is a small telescope with extremely precisely graduated mount used for the precise observation of star positions. They were previously widely used in astronomical observatories and naval observatories to measure star positions in order to compile nautical almanacs for use by mariners for celestial navigation, and observe star transits to set extremely accurate clocks (astronomical regulators) which were used to set marine chronometers carried on ships to determine longitude, and as primary time standards before atomic clocks. The instruments can be divided into three groups:

Meridian circle at the Kuffner observatory in Vienna, Austria

Meridian instruments

for observation of star transits in the exact direction of South or North:

Universal instruments

which allow transit measurements in any direction

  • Theodolite (Describing a theodolite as a transit may refer to the ability to turn the telescope a full rotation on the horizontal axis, which provides a convenient way to reverse the direction of view, or to sight the same object with the yoke in opposite directions, which causes some instrumental errors to cancel.) (Wolf and Brinker 183–6)
  • Altaz telescopes with graduated eyepieces (also for satellite transits)
  • Cinetheodolites

Zenith instruments and Astrolabes

Observation techniques and accuracy

Depending on the type of instrument, the measurements are carried out

  • visually and manual time registration (stopwatch, Auge-Ohr-Methode, chronograph)
  • visually by impersonal micrometer (moving thread with automatic registration)
  • photographic registration
  • CCD or other electro optic sensors.

The accuracy reaches from 0.2" (theodolites, small astrolabes) to 0.01" (modern meridian circles, Danjon). Early instruments (like the mural quadrants of Tycho Brahe) had no telescope and were limited to about 0.01°.

See also

References

  • Wolf, Paul R and Russell C. Brinker. Elementary Surveying, 8th ed. New York: Harper Collins, 1989.

Further reading

  • Karl Ramsayer: Geodätische Astronomie, Vol.2a of Handbuch der Vermessungskunde, 900 p., J.B.Metzler, Stuttgart 1969
  • Cauvenet and Brünnow's Handbooks of Spherical Geodesy

External links

  • "Transit instrument". The Columbia Encyclopedia (6th ed.). The Columbia University Press. 29 September 2018.
  • Dreyer, John Louis Emil (1911). "Transit Circle" . Encyclopædia Britannica. 27 (11th ed.). pp. 181–183.
  • Great Transit at Lick Observatory, +Photo
  • Modern roboter telescopes
  • The Carlsberg Automatic Meridian Circle
  • Photo of a 19th-century transit instrument (Jones 1826)
  • Transit instruments udes by the Survey of India, 1867)
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