Open main menu
Home
Random
Recent changes
Special pages
Community portal
Preferences
About Wikipedia
Disclaimers
Incubator escapee wiki
Search
User menu
Talk
Dark mode
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Editing
Equatorial coordinate system
(section)
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
== Rectangular coordinates: geocentric equatorial coordinates == [[File:Ra and dec rectangular.png|thumb|300px|Geocentric equatorial coordinates. The [[Origin (mathematics)|origin]] is the centre of the [[Earth]]. The fundamental [[Plane (geometry)|plane]] is the plane of the Earth's equator. The primary direction (the {{math|''x''}} axis) is the March [[equinox]]. A [[right-handed]] convention specifies a {{math|''y''}} axis 90° to the east in the fundamental plane; the {{math|''z''}} axis is the north polar axis. The reference frame does not rotate with the Earth, rather, the Earth rotates around the {{math|''z''}} axis.]] There are a number of [[Cartesian coordinate system|rectangular]] variants of equatorial coordinates. All have: * The [[origin (mathematics)|origin]] at the centre of the [[Earth]]. * The fundamental [[Plane (geometry)|plane]] in the plane of the Earth's equator. * The primary direction (the {{math|''x''}} axis) toward the March [[equinox]], that is, the place where the [[Sun]] crosses the [[celestial equator]] in a northward direction in its annual apparent circuit around the [[ecliptic]]. * A [[right-handed]] convention, specifying a {{math|''y''}} axis 90° to the east in the fundamental plane and a {{math|''z''}} axis along the north polar axis. The reference frames do not rotate with the Earth (in contrast to [[ECEF|Earth-centred, Earth-fixed]] frames), remaining always directed toward the [[equinox]], and drifting over time with the motions of [[axial precession|precession]] and [[astronomical nutation|nutation]]. * In [[astronomy]]:<ref>''Explanatory Supplement'' (1961), pp. 24–26</ref> ** The [[position of the Sun]] is often specified in the geocentric equatorial rectangular coordinates {{math|''X''}}, {{math|''Y''}}, {{math|''Z''}} and a fourth distance coordinate, {{math|''R''}} {{math|1=(= {{radical|''X''{{isup|2}} + ''Y''{{isup|2}} + ''Z''{{isup|2}}}})}}, in units of the [[astronomical unit]]. ** The positions of the [[planets]] and other [[Solar System]] bodies are often specified in the geocentric equatorial rectangular coordinates {{math|''ξ''}}, {{math|''η''}}, {{math|''ζ''}} and a fourth distance coordinate, {{math|''Δ''}} (equal to {{math|{{radical|''ξ''{{isup|2}} + ''η''{{isup|2}} + ''ζ''{{isup|2}}}}}}), in units of the [[astronomical unit]].{{paragraph}}These rectangular coordinates are related to the corresponding spherical coordinates by <math display="block">\begin{align} \frac{X}{R} = \frac{\xi}{\mathit{\Delta}} &= \cos \delta \cos \alpha \\ \frac{Y}{R} = \frac{\eta}{\mathit{\Delta}} &= \cos \delta \sin \alpha \\ \frac{Z}{R} = \frac{\zeta}{\mathit{\Delta}} &= \sin \delta \end{align}</math> * In [[astrodynamics]]:<ref>Vallado (2001), pp. 157, 158</ref> ** The positions of artificial Earth [[satellite]]s are specified in ''geocentric equatorial'' coordinates, also known as ''geocentric equatorial inertial (GEI)'', ''[[Earth-centered inertial|Earth-centred inertial]] (ECI)'', and ''conventional inertial system (CIS)'', all of which are equivalent in definition to the astronomical geocentric equatorial rectangular frames, above. In the geocentric equatorial frame, the {{math|''x''}}, {{math|''y''}} and {{math|''z''}} axes are often designated {{math|''I''}}, {{math|''J''}} and {{math|''K''}}, respectively, or the frame's [[Basis (linear algebra)|basis]] is specified by the [[unit vector]]s {{math|''Î''}}, {{math|''Ĵ''}} and {{math|''K̂''}}. ** The ''Geocentric Celestial Reference Frame (GCRF)'' is the geocentric equivalent of the [[International Celestial Reference Frame]] (ICRF). Its primary direction is the [[equinox]] of [[Epoch (astronomy)|J2000.0]], and does not move with [[Axial precession|precession]] and [[astronomical nutation|nutation]], but it is otherwise equivalent to the above systems.
Edit summary
(Briefly describe your changes)
By publishing changes, you agree to the
Terms of Use
, and you irrevocably agree to release your contribution under the
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
and the
GFDL
. You agree that a hyperlink or URL is sufficient attribution under the Creative Commons license.
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)