Engineering:Equatorial sextant
An equatorial sextant is a modified version of a sextant. One historically significant instrument called by that name was John Flamsteed's equatorial sextant, installed in the Greenwich Observatory in 1676. Seven feet across and possessing an iron frame,[1] it was mounted at an angle that aligned with the celestial equator, so that as it rotated, it tracked the motion of objects across the night sky.[2] Flamsteed used this instrument to measure angles of right ascension from 1676 through 1689[3] or 1690.[4]
Another device known by that name was patented by the American inventor William Austin Burt in 1856.[5] Burt's equatorial sextant included several elaborations on the basic sextant design, which enabled its user to determine navigational information without a supplemental chart or the need for calculation.[6]
References
- ↑ Laurie, P. S. (1960). "The buildings and old instruments of the Royal Observatory, Greenwich". The Observatory 80: 12–22. Bibcode: 1960Obs....80...13L. https://adsabs.harvard.edu/full/1960Obs....80...13L.
- ↑ Chapman, Allan (September 1984). "Tycho Brahe in China: the Jesuit mission to Peking and the iconography of European instrument-making processes" (in en). Annals of Science 41 (5): 417–443. doi:10.1080/00033798400200341. ISSN 0003-3790. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00033798400200341.
- ↑ "Telescope: Flamsteed's 7-foot Equatorial Sextant (1676)". http://www.royalobservatorygreenwich.org/articles.php?article=937.
- ↑ Chapman, Allan (September 1995). "Out of the meridian: John Bird's equatorial sector and the new technology of astronomical measurement" (in en). Annals of Science 52 (5): 431–463. doi:10.1080/00033799500200341. ISSN 0003-3790. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00033799500200341.
- ↑ "Equatorial Sextant" (in en). https://americanhistory.si.edu/collections/search/object/nmah_1167859.
- ↑ Briley-Webb, Linda (2019-02-22). "Equatorial sextant" (in en). Technical Innovation in American History: An Encyclopedia of Science and Technology [3 volumes]. ABC-CLIO. pp. 225–226. ISBN 978-1-61069-094-2. https://books.google.com/books?id=aWGHDwAAQBAJ.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equatorial sextant.
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