The Apparent Motion of the Sun
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If you can't run this applet properly,
please download the latest version of the Java Runtime Environment JRE at http://java.sun.com/j2se/.
Video Clip
I have recorded a video clip that explains this applet. It's
available in several formats.
If you can't get any sound in the QuickTime file, you may need to
download the latest version of
QuickTime.
Discussion
This Java applet shows the apparent motion of the Sun around the Earth. In other words,
we use the Earth as our point of reference.
- What I want to you understand here is how the Sun moves in a
spiral of circles up and down. In the course of one day, the
declination does not change much, so the path of the sun is almost a
circle, but in the course of the year, the declination changes.
- Can you tell when the equinoxes and solstices occur?
- Do you understand why the declination changes?
- Change the viewing angle to 90, so that you're looking straight
down at the North Pole. What can you say about the length of the day
at the pole?
- Do you understand the relationship between this applet and the one that shows the
motion of the Earth around the Sun?
Back to Heavenly
Mathematics.
Helmer Aslaksen
Department of Mathematics
National University of Singapore
aslaksen@math.nus.edu.sg
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