Stellar Aberration from Earth and from a Satellite
Caesar Viazminsky,
Piere Vizminiska
Issue:
Volume 9, Issue 3, September 2021
Pages:
22-31
Received:
4 June 2021
Accepted:
28 June 2021
Published:
9 July 2021
DOI:
10.11648/j.ajaa.20210903.11
Downloads:
Views:
Abstract: In his endeavor to find a concrete evidence in favor of the Copernican picture of the solar system, the English astronomer James Bradley made a series of astronomical observations during the period (1725-1728) aiming to detect a stellar parallax. His findings, which manifested indeed an annual apparent cyclic motion of a star, were however at conflict with what is expected in a parallax. To his surprise, the result of every measurement obtained corresponded to what he expected to get in a measurement done three months earlier. Bradley realized that he was witnessing a new physical effect, and he presented an explanation that conceived light as a corpuscular stream travelling at finite velocity. Despite that Bradley’s explanation of the stellar aberration effect was inadequate, the equation which he derived to quantify the aberration angle, predicted a better estimation of light velocity, and the aberration phenomenon itself was a concrete support of heliocentrism. Stellar aberration as well as some other optical experiments, whose explanations posed challenges to the existing physical theories in the late nineteenth century paved the way for the emergence of the special theory of relativity. In the current work we employ the theory of universal space and time to show that a given direction in a frame of reference is tilted when observed in a moving frame by an angle that depends on the direction itself and the velocity of the moving frame. The latter fact is utilized to explain stellar aberration, determine the deviation of a star’s vision direction from its true one, and deduce its apparent position at any instant as a function of its latitude and time. The novel concept of aberration correction vector is employed to derive the apparent elliptic path of an observed celestial object at any time. The concept of graded inertial frames is introduced and utilized to deal with aberration when observed from a satellite in a similar way to its treatment when observed from Earth. The transformation matrix between a geocentric frame and a satellite’s non-rotating frame is derived and used to transform temporary Earthly vision directions to the satellite’s frame. Furthermore, the transformed vectors are adopted as transient fixed directions relative to which the vision directions of a star from the satellite are specified throughout one revolution. Satellites connective matrices are constructed to make geometric information regarding the celestial sphere in one frame immediately usable by observers on Earth and in all other satellites.
Abstract: In his endeavor to find a concrete evidence in favor of the Copernican picture of the solar system, the English astronomer James Bradley made a series of astronomical observations during the period (1725-1728) aiming to detect a stellar parallax. His findings, which manifested indeed an annual apparent cyclic motion of a star, were however at confl...
Show More
Jupiter and Saturn Multi-layer Models Rotating Differentially
Joel Uriel Cisneros-Parra,
Francisco Javier Martinez-Herrera,
Daniel Montalvo-Castro
Issue:
Volume 9, Issue 3, September 2021
Pages:
32-41
Received:
2 July 2021
Accepted:
19 July 2021
Published:
27 July 2021
DOI:
10.11648/j.ajaa.20210903.12
Downloads:
Views:
Abstract: In a past work, models for Jupiter were constructed in base to a set of concentric distorted spheroids (“spheroidals”) rotating differentially—whose semi-axes are independent of one another—a task that was achieved with a law of rotation deduced from a generalization of Bernoulli’s theorem, and which holds exclusively for axial-symmetric masses. The shape of the mass is that of a spheroid whose surface equation contains an extra term, d/z4, where d is a parameter which measures the degree of distortion. Each layer rotates with its own profile of angular velocity. The rotation law has a simple dependence on the derivative of the gravitational potential. No magnetic fields or equations of state were involved. The multi- structures were demanded, firstly, to reproduce the gravitational moments of the planets, as surveyed by space missions; and, secondly, to be equilibrium figures. For the calculation of the gravitational moments, a minimization procedure was employed. Paying attention on the outermost laye—the relevant one in the present context—of the formerly reported models for Jupiter, we became aware that they all share an angular velocity profile that decreases from the pole towards the equator, an event that, so far, has not been verified observationally. Since figures with profiles of the opposite tendency turned out to be also possible, they should be included as candidates for our purpose, as effectively they are herein as a complement of that work. The same procedure is here entailed to Saturn, for which figures to show one or the other tendencies are as well obtained. The dual behavior of the rotation profiles may be explained by arguments involving the centripetal force. According to this standpoint, the double behavior is a consequence of the algebraic sign assigned to d: if positive, so that the surface is more bloated than that of a spheroid, the decreasing tendency results; whereas if negative, so that the surface is more depressed, the increasing tendency shows up. This, in turn, is because for d negative the radial force increases more rapidly from pole to the equator than for d positive. We point out that the rotation profiles of the current figures are determined from their equilibrium, rather than being imposed ad initio.
Abstract: In a past work, models for Jupiter were constructed in base to a set of concentric distorted spheroids (“spheroidals”) rotating differentially—whose semi-axes are independent of one another—a task that was achieved with a law of rotation deduced from a generalization of Bernoulli’s theorem, and which holds exclusively for axial-symmetric masses. Th...
Show More