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TRANSIT CIRCLE, or MERIDIAN CIRCLE , an instrument for observing theSee also: time of a See also: star's passing the meridian, at the same time measuring its angular distance from the See also: zenith
.
The idea of having an instrument (quadrant) fixed in the See also: plane of the meridian occurred even to the See also: ancient astronomers, and is mentioned by See also: Ptolemy, but it was not carried into practice until Tycho Brahe constructed a large meridian quadrant
.
This instrument enabled the observer to determine simultaneously right See also: ascension and declination, but it does not appear to have been much used for right ascension during the 17th century, the method of equal altitudes by portable quadrants or See also: measures of the angular distance between stars with a See also: sextant being preferred
.
These methods were, however, very inconvenient,which induced Romer to invent the transit instrument about 169o
.
It consists of a See also: horizontal See also: axis in the direction See also: east and west resting on firmly fixed supports, and having a See also: telescope fixed at right angles to it, revolving freely in the plane of the meridian: At the same time Romer invented the altitude and See also: azimuth instrument for measuring vertical and horizontal angles, and in 1704 he combined a vertical circle with his transit instrument, so as to determine both co-ordinates at the same time
.
This latter idea was, however, not adopted elsewhere, although the transit instrument soon came into universal use (the first one at See also: Greenwich was mounted in 1721), and the mural quadrant continued till the end of the century to be employed for deter-See also: mining declinations
.
The See also: advantage of using a whole circle, as less liable to change its figure, and not requiring reversal in See also: order to observe stars See also: north of the zenith, was then again recognized by See also: Ramsden, who also improved the method of See also: reading off angles by means of a micrometer microscope as described below
.
The making of circles was shortly afterwards taken up by See also: Troughton, who in 18o6 constructed the first See also: modern transit circle for Groombridge's See also: observatory at See also: Blackheath, but he afterwards abandoned the idea, and designed the mural circle to take the place of the mural quadrant
.
In the See also: United See also: Kingdom the transit instrument and mural circle continued till the See also: middle of the 19th century to be the See also: principal instrument in observatories, the first transit circle constructed there being that at Greenwich (mounted in 185o) but on the continent the transit circle superseded them from the years 1818-1819, when two circles by See also: Repsold and by Reichenbach were mounted at See also: Gottingen, and one by Reichenbach at See also: Konigsberg.' The See also: firm of Repsold was for a number of years eclipsed by that of Pistor and Martins in Berlin, who furnished various observatories with first-class See also: instruments, but since the See also: death of Martins the Repsolds have again taken the See also: lead, and have of See also: late years made many transit circles
.
The observatories of Harvard See also: College (United States), Cambridge and See also: Edinburgh have large circles by Troughton and See also: Simms, who also made the Greenwich circle from the design of See also: Airy .2
In the earliest transit instrument the telescope was not placed in the middle of the axis, but much nearer to one end, in order to prevent the axis from bending under the See also: weight of the telescope
.
It is now always placed in the centre of the axis
.
The latter consists of one piece of See also: brass or See also: gun-See also: metal with carefully turned cylindrical See also: steel pivots at each end
.
Several See also: recent instruments have been made entirely of steel, which is much more rigid than brass
.
The centre of the axis is shaped like a See also: cube, the sides of which See also: form the basis of two cones which end in cylindrical parts
.
The pivots rest on V-shaped See also: bearings, either let into the massive See also: stone or brick piers which support the instrument or attached to metal frameworks bolted on the tops of the piers: In order to relieve the pivots from the weight of the instrument, which would soon destroy their figure, the cylindrical
See also: part of each end of the axis is supported by a See also: hook supplied with See also: friction rollers, and suspended from a See also: lever supported by the pier and counterbalanced so as to leave only about 10 lb pressure on each bearing
.
Near each end of the axis is attached a circle or See also: wheel (generally of 3 or 31 ft. diameter) finely divided to 2' or 5' on a slip of See also: silver let into the face of the circle near the circumference
.
The See also: graduation is read off by means of microscopes, generally four for each circle at 90° from each other, as by taking the mean of the four readings the eccentricity and the accidental errors of graduation are to a See also: great extent eliminated.' In the earlier instruments by Pistor and See also: Mar-tins the microscopes were fixed in holes drilled through the pier, but afterwards they let the piers be made narrower, so that the microscopes could be at the sides of them, attached to radial arms starting from near the bearings of the axis
.
This is preferable, as it allows of the temporary See also: attachment of See also: auxiliary microscopes for the purpose of investigating the errors of graduation of the circle, but the See also: plan of the Repsolds and of Simms, to make the piers See also: short and to let the microscopes and supports of the axis be carried by an iron framework, is better still, as no part of the circle is
' The most notable exception was the transit instrument and vertical circle of the See also: Pulkovo observatory, specially designed by the elder Struve for fundamental determinations
.
' This instrument differs in many particulars from others: the important principle of symmetry in all the parts (scrupulously followed in all others) is quite discarded; there is only one circle; and the instrument cannot be reversed
.
There is a similar instrument at the Cape observatory
.
On Reichenbach's circles there were verniers instead of micro-scopes, and they were attached to an See also: alidade circle, the immovability of which was tested by a level
.
A
t Transmission at'
ao,000 volts
Glow Lamps
Storage Batteries
Arcs
exposed to See also: radiation from the pier, which may cause strain and thereby change the angular distance between various parts of the circle
.
Each microscope is furnished• with a micrometer screw, which moves a See also: frame carrying a See also: cross, or better two close parallel threads of spider's web, with which the distance of a division See also: line from the centre of the See also: field can be measured, the drum of the screw being
divided to single seconds of arc (o.1" being estimated), while
the number of revolutions are counted by a kind of comb
in the field of view
.
The periodic errors of the screw
Transit Circle
.
must be investigated and taken into account, and care must be taken that the microscopes are placed and kept at such a distance from the circle that one revolution will correspond to 1', the excess or defect (error of run) being determined from time to time by measuringSee also: standard intervals of 2' or 5' on the circle
.
The telescope consists of two slightly conical tubes screwed to the central cube of the axis
.
It is of great importance that this connexion should be as firm and the See also: tube as stiff as possible,' as the flexure of the tube will affect the declinations deduced from the observations
.
The flexure in the horizontal position of the tube may be determined by means of two collimators or telescopes placed horizontally in the meridian, north and See also: south of the transit circle, with their See also: object glasses towards it
.
If these are pointed on one another (through holes in the central tube of the telescope), so that the wire-crosses in their foci coincide, then the telescope, if pointed first to one and then to the other, will have described exactly 18o°, and by reading off the circle each time the amount of flexure will be found
.
M
.
Loewy has constructed a very ingenious apparatus2 for determining the flexure in any zenith distance, but generally the observer of standard stars endeavours to eliminate the effect of flexure in one of the following ways: either the tube is so arranged that eyepiece and object-See also: glass can be interchanged, whereby the mean of two observations of the same star in the two positions of the object-glass will be See also: free from the effect of flexure, or a star is not only observed directly (in zenith distance Z), but also by reflection from a mercury trough (in zenith distance 18o°—Z), as the mean result of the Z.D. of the See also: direct and reflection observations, before and after See also: reversing the instrument east and west, will only contain the terms of the flexure depending on sin 2Z, sin 4Z, &c
.
In order to raise the instrument a reversing See also: carriage is provided which runs on rails between the piers, and on which the axis with circles and telescope can be raised by a kind of screw-See also: jack, wheeled out from between the piers, turned exactly 180°, wheeled back, and gently lowered on its bearings
.
The See also: eye end of the telescope has in a plane through the focus a number of vertical and one or two horizontal wires (spider lines)
.
The former are used for observing the transits of the stars, each wire furnishing a See also: separate result for the time of transit over the middle wire by adding or subtracting the known See also: interval between the latter and the wire in question
.
The intervals are determined by observing the time taken by a star of known declination to pass from one wire to the other, the See also: pole star being best on account of its slow motion.' Instead of vertical wires, the eye end may be fitted with Repsold's self-registering micrometer with one movable wire to follow the star (see MICROMETER)
.
The instrument is See also: pro-
' Reichenbach supplied his tubes with counterpoising levers like those on the Dorpat refractor (see TELESCOPE)
.
' Comptes rendus, lxxxvii . 24 . The transits are either observed by " eye and ear," counting the second beats of theSee also: clock and comparing the distance of the star from the wire at the last beat before the transit over the wire with the distance at the first beat after the transit, in this way estimating the time of transit to o. i° ; or the observer employs a " See also: chronograph,"vided with a clamping apparatus, by which the observer, after having beforehand set to the approximate declination of a star, can clamp the axis so that the telescope cannot be moved except very slowly by a handle pushing the end of a See also: fine screw against the clamp arm, which at the other See also: side is pressed by a strong spring
.
By this slow motion, the star is made to run along one of the horizontal wires (or if there are two close ones, in the middle between them), after which the microscopes are read off
.
A movable horizontal wire or declination-micrometer is also often used
.
The field or the wires can be illuminated at the observer's pleasure; the lamps are placed at some distance from the piers in order not to heat the instrument, and the See also: light passes through holes in the piers and through the hollow axis to the cube, whence it is directed to the eye-end by a See also: system of prisms.'
The time of the star's transit over the middle wire is never exactly equal to the actual time of its meridian passage, as the plane in which the telescope turns never absolutely coincides with the meridian
.
Let the production of the west end of the axis meet the See also: celestial sphere in a point of which the altitude above the See also: horizon is b (the error of inclination), and of which the azimuth is 9o°—a (the azimuth being counted from south through west), while the See also: optical axis of the telescope makes the angle 90 +,c with the west end of the axis of the instrument, then the correction to the observed time of transit will be {a sin(4,—S) + b cos (¢—8) + c} / cos 6, where 4' is the latitude of the station and 8 the declination of the star
.
This is called Tobias Mayer's See also: formula, and is very convenient if only a few observations have to be reduced
.
Putting b sin ¢—a cos ¢=n, we get See also: Hansen's formula, which gives the correction = b sec ¢ + n (tan 8 — tan 4') + c sec 8, which is more convenient for a greater number of observations
.
The daily aberration is always deducted from c, as it is also multiplied by sec S (being 0.31" cos 4, sec S)
.
The above corrections are for upper culmination; below the pole 18o° — 8 has to be substituted for S
.
The See also: constant c is determined by pointing the instrument on one of the collimators, measuring the distance of its wire-cross from the centre wire of the transit circle by a vertical wire movable by a micrometer screw, reversing the instrument and repeating the operation, or (without reversing) by pointing the two collimators on one another and measuring the distance of first one and then the other wire-cross from the centre wire
.
The inclination b is measured directly by a level which can be suspended on the pivots.' Having thus found b and c, the observation of two stars. of known right ascension will furnish two equations from which the clock error and the azimuth can be found . For finding the azimuth it is most advantageous to use two stars differing as nearly 90° in declination as possible, such as a star near the pole and one near the equator, or better still (if the weather permits it) two successive meridian transits of a close circumpolar star (one above and one below the pole), as in thisSee also: case errors in the assumed right ascension will not influence the result
.
The interval of time between the culminations or meridian transits of two stars is their difference of right ascension, 24 See also: hours corresponding to 36o° or 1 See also: hour to 150
.
If once the absolute right ascensions of a number of standard stars are known, it is very See also: simple by means of these to determine the R.A. of any number of stars
.
The absolute R.A. of a star is found by observing the interval of time between its culmination and that of the See also: sun
.
If the inclination of the See also: ecliptic (s) is known, and the declination of the sun (6) is observed at the time of transit, we have sin a tan e = tan 6, which gives the R.A. of the sun, from which, together with the observed interval of time corrected for the See also: rate of the clock, we get the R.A. of the star
.
Differentiation of the formula shows that observations near the equinoxes are most advantageous, and that errors in the assumed e and the observed 6 will have no influence if the 6,a is observed at two epochs when the sun's R.A. is A and 18o°—A or as near thereto as possible
.
A great number of observations of this kind will furnish materials for a standard See also: catalogue; but the right ascensions of many important catalogues have been found by making use of the R.A.'s of a previous catalogue to determine the clock error and thus to improve the individual adopted R.A.'s of the former catalogue
.
In order to determine absolute declinations or polar distances, it is first necessary to determine the co-latitude (or distance of the pole from the zenith) by observing the upper and See also: lower culmination of a number of circumpolar stars
.
The difference between the circle reading after observing a star and the reading corresponding to the zenith is the zenith distance of the star, and this plus the co-latitude is the north polar distance or 9o° — S
.
In order to
and by pressing an electric See also: key causes a mark to be made on a paper stretched over a uniformly revolving drum, on which the clock beats are at the same time also marked electrically
.
The idea of
See also: illuminating through the axis is due to H
.
Ussher, professor of astronomy inSee also: Dublin (d
.
1790)
.
To avoid the use of a very large level, the pivots of the new transit circle at See also: Kiel are supplied with small " riders " carrying a wire-cross; these can in turn be observed through a horizontal telescope with a See also: hanging mirror in front of its object-glass, whereby the difference in height of the two pivots above a horizontal line may be measured
.
determine the zenith point of the circle, the telescope is directed vertically downwards and a See also: basin of mercury is placed under it, forming an absolutely horizontal mirror
.
Looking through the telescope the observer See also: sees the horizontal wire and a reflected image of the same, and if the telescope is moved so as to make these coincide, its optical axis will be perpendicular to the plane of the horizon, and the circle reading will be 18o° + zenith point
.
In observations of stars refraction has to be taken into account as well as the errors of graduation and flexure, and, if the bisection of the star on the horizontal wire was not made in the centre of the field, allowance must be made for curvature (or the deviation of the star's path from a great circle) and for the inclination of the horizontal wire to the horizon
.
The amount of this inclination is found by taking repeated observations of the zenith distance of a star during the one transit, the pole star being the most suitable owing to its slow motion
.
Attempts have been made in various places to record the transits of a star photographically; with most success at the See also: Georgetown College Observatory, See also: Washington (since 1889)
.
A sensitive See also: plate is placed in the focus of a transit instrument and a number of short exposures made, their length and the time they are made being registered automatically by a clock
.
The exposing shutter is a thin See also: strip of steel, fixed to the armature of an electromagnet
.
The plate thus gives a series of dots or short lines, and the vertical wires are photographed on the plate by throwing light through the object-glass for one or two seconds
.
This seems to give better results than the method adopted at the See also: Paris observatory, where the plate is moved by clock-See also: work and the exposure is comparatively long, while the image of a fixed slit is photographed at different recorded instants
.
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