Table of Contents
How did sailors calculate longitude?
Sailors used a sextant to determine their latitudinal position. Longitude lines run vertically across the globe and are used to measure distances east and west of Greenwich, England.
How can solar noon be determined?
Solar noon is the time when the Sun appears to contact the local celestial meridian. This is when the Sun reaches its apparent highest point in the sky, at 12 noon apparent solar time and can be observed using a sundial. The local or clock time of solar noon depends on the longitude and date.
How was longitude first determined?
Hipparchus, a Greek astronomer (190–120 BC), was the first to specify location using latitude and longitude as co-ordinates. He proposed a zero meridian passing through Rhodes. In 1530, Gemma Frisius proposed a new method of calculating longitude using a clock.
How do you calculate longitude using time?
The Earth rotates one full turn (360º of longitude) in one day. It therefore turns one degree of longitude in 1/360th of a day, or every four minutes. To calculate your longitude, you therefore simply need to work out the time difference between noon at your location and noon at the Prime Meridian.
How do you determine longitude and latitude?
First, always assume that the top of the map is north. The numbers on the right and left side of a map refer to the latitude. The numbers on the top and bottom of the map are the longitude.
How do you measure latitude and longitude on a map?
Latitude is indicated on a map by a series of evenly-spaced horizontal lines running from one side of the map to the other, while longitude is indicated by a series of evenly-spaced vertical lines running from top to bottom. Look for numbers along the edges of the map giving coordinates for each line.
What measures time from noon to noon?
Sundials are based on the idea of measuring time before and after noon. Noon is when the sun is at its highest in the sky. People tend to assume that the time between noon one day and noon the next is exactly 24 hours. In fact, the length of a day varies slightly throughout the year.
How do we measure longitude?
Longitude is measured by imaginary lines that run around the Earth vertically (up and down) and meet at the North and South Poles. These lines are known as meridians. Each meridian measures one arcdegree of longitude. The distance around the Earth measures 360 degrees.
How did sailors determine latitude and longitude?
Early tools that measured the angle of the stars and sun allowed sailors to determine their latitude based on how far these celestial bodies were from the horizon. Sailors could determine latitude easily with celestial navigation, but longitude could not be measured accurately until many centuries later, with the invention of the chronometer.
How did sailors measure the height of the Sun?
Sea astrolabe: In the Middle Ages, sailors used astrolabes to measure the height of the sun or stars in the sky. The Mariner’s astrolabe was a metal disc with a scale and ruler. By holding the disc at eye level from a ring at the top and adjusting the ruler, sailors could determine the altitude of celestial bodies.
How does a sailor know the time?
Given an astronomical measure of local time (e.g. high noon, when the sun is at its zenith) the sailor checks the time on the chronometer. If the chronometer reads 6pm for example, he knows it was high noon at Greenwich six hours ago.
How was Longitude determined before the marine chronometer was invented?
Before the marine chronometer was invented, Latitude could be found quite accurately with celestial navigation and older instruments like the astrolabe. However, longitude could only be estimated, because an accurate determination of longitude is made by comparing time differences.