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"John Nagelson" wrote:
Unless I am mistaken, though, it gives the list of 57 plus Polaris, not the 173, although it says the latter is given in the US Nautical Almanac. Maybe there is a shareware navigation program somewhere that I can pick out the info from??? Any visible star can be used for navigation. The 57 given in Alamanacs are all bright stars which are not easily confused with others. The majority of the 173 you will find are sometimes pretty iffy and any celestial navigator would probaly only resort to them in fairly awkward circumstances. When you start hitting 3 magnitude and higher it gets more awkward to distinguish the star one wants from the background - especially on a ship which may be moving quite heavily. Brown, for instance, (In the last copy I bought) gives some stars up to 4 magnitude. But practically, unless you are that rarest of navigators who can distinguish 173 stars with certainty, anything much higher than 2 magnitude becomes chancy. Wheras the SHA and Dec of the 57 principal stars are given on the daily pages of nautical almanacs I don't think I have ever seen the lesser stars listed thus. They are usually confined to a couple of pages in the back giving the SHA and Dec for the month only. In principle, unless you plan to sail the world, you could probably get away with an intimate knowledge of about sixteen stars in your hemisphere. Eugene L Griessel For every person willing to teach, there are 30 not willing to be taught |
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