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Re: Sun shadow for True North
- Subject: [amsat-bb] Re: Sun shadow for True North
- From: Tony Langdon <vk3jed@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 29 Dec 2007 11:06:04 +1100
At 05:29 AM 12/29/2007, Dave Guimont wrote:
>A vertical rod about 4' long (plumb it, or use a level) will have the
>shortest shadow at noon.
Not necessarily. Ignoring DST, local solar noon can occur anywhere
within a window of around 1 hour (give or take, depending on the
exact borders of your local time zone), because each time zone is
approximately 15 degrees wide (there are local variations that take
the official zones beyond the 15 degree nominal zones). For example,
here in Melbourne, local solar noon usually occurs around
approximately 02:15 - 02:20 UTC (12:15 - 12:20 standard time or 13:15
- 13:20 DST). In Brisbane, it occurs before noon AEST, despite both
cities being in the same time zone. Using the "shortest shadow at
noon" method, you can have an error of up to 10 degrees (now THAT
would ruin the performance of your high gain antenna!). Here, it
would be around 4-5 degrees, if one was ignorant of the actual time
of solar noon.
The moving shadow to find the East - West line is a much better and
MUCH more accurate idea.
73 de VK3JED
http://vkradio.com
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