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Celestial Navigation Basics
Introduction
Celestial navigation has been with us since the beginning of time. Various civilizations haveused it, some like the Polynesians, with remarkable and extremely daring skills. What follows is
a set of mathematical formulas which I have derived over the years for my own use. All theformulas published here are based on equations which I have solved myself, none were copied
from any other books. This does not mean that I did not read books on celestial navigation,
merely that I read them after having solved the problems my own way. Nor are these formulas
readily found as most navigational text books are guides telling you how to use otherpublications (eg HO249) which let you find the result without any calculations. This is all well
and good, but it won't let you program your own calculator.So this page is for the people who are curious, have a table of logarithms (the batteries never run
out on these and I certainly haven't thrown mine out) or a scientific calculator.
Definitions of terms
The first thing to learn are the terms. In this page I shall follow the sailor's convention though I
will mention in passing, when and if I think about it, the astronomer's and land surveyor's terms.
Celestial navigation is based on 2 spheres. One is the earth, and I guess everybody knows that
the coordinates to be used are the latitude and longitude. Celestial objects have a similar set of
coordinates however, two such sets are in use at the same time: One set is called longitude andlatitude, these refer to the position relative to the ecliptic plane which is the plane of the Earth's
orbit around the Sun and which is tilted about 23 relative to the equatorial plane, in thissystem, the origin of all coordinates is the centre of the Sun.
The other system is essentially an earth centered view of the universe and uses a set ofcoordinates based on the equatorial plane. The coordinates in this system are the declination and
the Greenwich hour angle.
Declination : This marks the height above or below the equatorial plane for celestial
objects. Equivalent to the latitude on earth. it is followed by North or South same as latitude.
GHA : GHA (Greenwich Hour Angle) indicates the position past the plane of the
Greenwich meridian measured in degrees. Equivalent to longitude on earth. It can befollowed by East or West.
LHA : LHA (Local Hour Angle) is the angle between the meridian of the celestial object
and the meridian of the observer, LHA = GHA(of celestial object) - Longitude (of observer).
SHA : Sidereal Hour Angle. Because the fixed stars (they are not really fixed, but they
are so far away that they don't seem to move much), don't move relative to each other, rather
than give the GHA of each star for each hour of the day, for each day of the year, the
Nautical Almanac publishes only the list of GHA for a fictitious point called "first point of
Aries" (also denoted by the Zodiac sign of the Ram). The SHA of the stars is simply acoordinate relative to this point. So to calculate the GHA of a star all you have to do is:
GHA(star) = SHA(star) + GHA(aries). Ideally the GHA of aries should not vary relative tothe stars, unfortunately, as Hipparchus noted a long time ago, the earth wobbles, its axis
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doing a full circle in about 26000 years (if my memory is correct) which means that the firstpoint of Aries slowly drifts across the background of stars, making a full circle in 26000
years. It is called the first point of aries because it is the point where the sun crosses the
equatorial plane on its way from the southern hemisphere to the northern one (around the
21st of March) and it happens to fall in the Zodiac sign of Aries the Ram. Will the pointchange name when it has drifted into another sign? Well the answer to this one is already
known as the drift has already occured and the 1st point of Aries is actually in Pisces at the
moment but we still call it 1st point of Aries. Old habits die hard.
Note that astronomers and land surveyors use RA (Right Ascension) instead of SHA, usuallymeasured in time (hours and minutes) and increasing in an Easterly direction, to convert just
remember that 1hour=15 degrees, 1 minute of time = 15 minutes of arc and don't forget to
change the sign. Instead of GHA Aries they use GST (Greenwich Sidereal Time).
Ecliptic : Plane where lies the orbit of the earth. From our view point, the path defined by
the sun as it travels over the year and therefore the plane where the Zodiac signs lay. Most
planets also are in this plane to a close approximation which makes me wonderhow Keplerdecided that the orbit of the planets around the sun was elliptical rather than
circular when all he could see was a circle almost edge on.
Altitude or Elevation : Angle between a celestial body and the horizontal plane of the
observer, as measured by a sextant for sailors and theodolites for surveyors.
Equinoctial Plane : Plane defined for the celestial sphere to separate the Northern part
from the Southern part. Since this plane is merely an extension of the equatorial plane, it's
obviously a deliberate attempt by astronomers to confuse us by giving 2 names to the sameplane.
Azimuth : Angle measured horizontally between the direction of the nearest pole and thevertical plane where lies the celestial object (ie if the object is north of you then it is the angle
between true north and the object, if it's south then it's the angle between true south and the
object) . I don't use it myself as I am easily confused and I prefer to use the bearing which is
always measured from true North and goes clockwise (0 = North, 90 = East, 180 = South
270= West, 360=0=North). If you are wise, you'll use the bearing as well, but if you use pre
compiled tables such as HO249, then you will have to use the azimuth.
Bearing : Angle measured horizontally from North to whatever direction you are
pointing. Since there are 2 norths, the TRUE north and the MAGNETIC North, then specifythe figures by saying TRUE bearing or MAG. bearing. This way you won't confuse anyone
(including yourself). And remember the sailor's motto :
" If the variation is West,
the compass is best.If the variation is East,
the compass is least"
Nautical Mile : Officially, a nautical mile is defined as 1852 m or 6080 feet. But
originally it was a minute of arc on a great circle. It is the 2nd definition that we will use herehere, as do every sailor around the world, thereby showing the standard makers what we
really think of them.
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Sign convention : Because my formulas are meant to be universal, these are the sign
conventions which I have adopted. Others may have used different sign convention, that'stheir prerogative but I don't care.
1. Latitude and Declination will be positive when North, negative otherwise.
2. Longitude, GHA, SHA, and LHA will be positive when West, negative when East.
3. Bearings will always be positive when measured clockwise, negative whenanticlockwise.
Note also that in my formulas, I've assumed for angle of arc unit the degree, hence why the
number 60 appears sometimes to convert degrees into minutes (or nautical miles since 1 nautical
mile = 1 minute of arc on the earth).
Distance and bearing between 2 points on earth
Suppose you are at point "A", latA and longA being the latitude and longitude of A, and you
want to know how far point B is ( latB, longB ). The distance in Nautical miles is:
And the bearing angle of B as seen from A is given by:
Now this formula, I have never seen in any book, what I have seen is an ACOS function of theazimuth. But in my view an ATAN function is preferable as it at least gives you the correctdirection. OK so you might end up travelling in the opposite direction and circle the great circle
from the long side rather than the short one, but at least you will arrive at B eventually. With the
ACOS formula, it is possible to pick the wrong great circle (the one with the symmetrical
azimuth) . If you do, you'll never ever meet B.
These 2 formulas can come in pretty handy also if you want to erect the tourist direction pointers
which have about 50 indicators mounted on a post, all pointing in a different direction, andreading: "New-York 4622 miles", "Tokyo 2473 miles", etc.., your signs will point to the right
directions and have the correct distances (at least they will before vandals come and rearrangethe lot).
Find also the handy Great Circle calculatorwhich lets you do the calculation easily.
Altitude and Bearing of a Celestial Object
Suppose now that you know where you are (eg Lat and Long are known) and there is a celestial
body which you are about to observe and whose coordinates you know (Dec and GHA), is it
possible to predict what elevation you will measure and what the bearing to the object is? Theanswer is yes to both questions. First calculate the local hour angle, LHA = GHA - Long
(remember the sign convention, whilst the nautical almanac only publishes positive GHA's, it iscustomary to refer to an eastern longitude as a positive number. Melbourne's longitude is about
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150 E but this is equivalent to -150 W or 210 W, therefore in this case LHA = GHA + 150 orLHA = GHA - 210, either formula is correct). Then we get for the altitude:
And the bearing is given by :
Do these formulas look familiar ?
Well they should because they are identical to the distance and bearing formulas presentedearlier, the idea behind celestial navigation is to calculate the distance and bearing from yourself
to the point on earth directly below the celestial object which you observe, except that the
sextant, instead of measuring the angle between you and the celestial object as seen from the
centre of the earth, measures the complementary angle because we use the horizon instead of thevertical as a reference. Therefore ASIN appears in the formula instead of ACOS. Again the
ATAN formula for the bearing is better than the ACOS or ASIN form. For instance if theformula is based on the ACOS function, and you are taking a sun sight around lunch time and
your azimuth is returned as Az=ACOS(0.97) does that mean the Azimuth is 14 degrees or is it-14 degrees (ie is the Sun a little bit to the East or a little bit to the West), easy to make a
mistake. With ASIN, the problem arises early in the morning (is the Sun a little bit South or a
little bit North of East) and in late afternoon (is the Sun a little bit North or a little bit South of
West). Hard to tell sometimes without having to think about it. With the ATAN formula, no
thinking required, the Sun is either North or South at lunch time but, unless it is dead over head,
I know which it is . In the morning it can only be East (West does not make sense then) , in theevening it can only be West (East does not make sense now).
Navigation in principle
Of course, if you already know where you are, there is no point in trying to determine it from the
formulas above . But when you actually navigate, the odds are you don't know quite where you
are, so how do we use the above formulas?
We draw what is called a position line orSumnerline. Although the modern position line is not
quite a real Sumner line but it is close enough.
Like all good inventions, Sumner lines were discovered by chance by a fellow called , you
guessed right, "Sumner", Thomas H. Sumnerto be precise (maybe related to the late professor
Julius Sumner-Miller). Sumner was a ship captain on his way from Charleston (South Carolina)to Greenock (Scotland). And he was worried because he had been sailing for several days in bad
weather, the wind was blowing from the South East making Ireland a lee shore, and he had notbeen able to see the sun or any stars, the coast was getting near, and he did not know exactly
where he was. Suddenly there was a break in the clouds, so he grabbed his sextant and snatched
a quick sun sight, before the clouds covered the sky again.
Now he was wondering what to do with this information so he played a "what if" game. He did
not use the bearing formula above, because nobody had worked it out in quite that form yet, but
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he knew the altitude formula and he said "what if my latitude is... " and calculated thecorresponding longitude and he plotted it on the chart, then he tried it again with another
latitude, got another point on the chart. After doing that three or four times he suddenly realised
that all the points he was marking on the chart seemed to fall on a straight line. Without thinking
about it any more, he saw that the line needed pushing north by a few odd miles to lead straightover Small's light, so he turned north for those few miles, then turned to starboard until he was
sailing parallel to that very first "Sumner line". His crew were a bit perplexed at that, wondering
if the captain had gone mad, but when suddenly they arrived right at the very light, they thoughthe was a flaming genius. And so did the rest of the sailing community.
So why did the points fall on a straight line? They did not really but Sumner did not realise it at
the time. The points Sumner was plotting were the points on earth from which any one would
have seen, at the same moment as he did, the sun with exactly the same altitude. All those points
are on a circle centered at the point on earth directly below the sun. Because this circle is usually
huge, a small part of it appears straight on a Mercator projection chart.
So this is how we proceed in practice:
1. We assume we know where we are , we call this DR (for Dead Reckoning).2. We calculate, based on the latitude and longitude of the DR, what the bearing and the
altitude of the celestial object would be at the time of observation.
3. We draw the bearing line passing through DR.
4. We compare the actual measured altitude, with what it would have been had we been at
DR, the difference, in minutes of arc, is equal to the number of nautical miles that we have tomove along the bearing line to find our position line. ie if the angle measured is greaterthan
the calculated one by say 13' of arc, then we move towards the celestial object by 13 nauticalmiles, and if say the measured angle was less by 7' of arc than the calculated one, we would
move away from the celestial object by 7 nautical miles.
5. Finally we draw a line at right angle to the bearing line, passing by the point we have just
found. This line is our position line and all we can tell is we are somewhere on this line.
Note the difference between our position line and Sumner's original one: our line is the
tangent to the circle at the point nearest to DR, Sumner's was the circle. Sumner's line is intheory more accurate, but the circle is usually so large that the loss of accuracy is
insignificant. Note also that in the tropics the circles can be extremely small, I rememberreading about a P&O captain who used to obtain all his fixes without any calculations, he
would take several observations when the sun was nearly dead overhead (say over a 15
minute period) for each time observation, he would plot the coordinates (GHA,DEC) of the
Sun on his map then draw a circle of radius equal to (90 degrees - measured altitude). Sinceover the 15 minute period he would probably have collected 4 or 5 observations, he would
draw 4 or 5 circles which would all intersect at one point. Simple but effective especially asin the tropics, position lines usually end up running all almost North-South giving good
longitude information but lousy intercepts and large errors in latitude. The noon sight is
damn important then.
6. If you wait a few hours, the sun will change position and you will be able to repeat the
operation and determine a 2nd position line which will intersect the first. Provided you
haven't moved in the interval, you are at the intersection.
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7. If you have moved (and the odds are you would because it can be pretty boring sittingaround doing nothing on a boat that's just bobbing up and down in the middle of the ocean),
then all you need do is translate the original position line in the same direction, and the same
distance as you have travelled. Your position will be at the intercept of the new line and the
translated one. Sailors call this the SUN-RUN-SUN method.