Circumpolar Calculations
6.15 - Be able to use a star’s declination to determine whether the star will be circumpolar from an observer’s latitudeIn the exam you may be asked to determine:
- Which stars are circumpolar and which are not.
- What latitude you would have to be at in order to see a certain star
- The smallest or largest Declination a star would be at from a given latitude
The formula for working out if a star is circumpolar or not is:
D >= 90° - L
D= Declination
>== Greater than or equal to
L= Latitude
Questions
Question 1
Deneb = Dec 45°
Arcturus = Dec 19°
Alpha Centuri = Dec -61°
If you were in London would Deneb be circumpolar?
D greater than or equal to 90 - L
90 - L (51) = 39
45 is greater than 39 so Deneb is circumpolar
Arcturus (19N) is less than 39 so is not circumpolar but seasonal
Alpha Centuri has a declination -61 is less than 39 and so would not be viewable from London.
Question 2
How far south would you have to be to see Alpha Centuri?
Tip - treat negative numbers as positive and then convert them afterwards.
So to see it add 90 to -61 which makes 29 so you would have to travel to latitude 29N to see this star.
Question 3
How far south would you have to be to see Alpha Centuri as a circumpolar star?
Check AnswerTo see it as a circumpolar star = 90 - 61 = 29 so you would have to be at least 29° south to see it as a southern circumpolar star.
Question 4
State whether or not each of these stars would be:
Visible from New York (41°N) or Sydney (34°S) and circumpolar from either city or seasonal.
Also state the minimum latitude (north and south) they would have to be seen from to be circumpolar.
Key: New York = NY, Sydney = SY.
Star | Dec. | V | C | ML | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
NY | SY | NY | SY | NY | SY | ||
Capella | 46N | ||||||
Betelgeux | 7N | ||||||
Vega | 39N | ||||||
Antares | 26S | ||||||
Alpha Crux | 63S |
Visible?
Circumpolar?
Min Latitude?
Summary
D >= 90° - L
D= Declination
>== Greater than or equal to
L= Latitude