Thanks, John. Now this matter is very clear to be understood. Really not 
problematic for very small angular distances.
There are a lot of topics where our apparent awareness is only a lack of 
knowledge.

Antoni
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: John Mahony 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Tuesday, October 28, 2008 4:56 AM
  Subject: Re: [skychart-discussion] Pa from A->B + B->A isn't 360?


  ----- Original Message ----

  > From: Antoni Clavell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
  > 
  > Hi Sander, A-B must be + or - 180º, i. e. 296.5º - 116.5º must be 180º. 
  > (Rounding can lead to an error of 1º)

  It isn't necessarily rounding error, but might be the definition of PA. PA is 
usually used over small distances, like describing the direction of separation 
between double stars, or the long axis of an elliptical or spiral galaxy. And 
in that case PA is like compass azimuth degrees, applied to celestial 
directions. But for larger distances, the geometry of a sphere is not quite as 
simple. More generally, PA is the angle of the "great circle" path between star 
A and star B, (where angle is as I just described it for small distances) but 
the "angle" of that circle will depend on where along the path you measure it 
at. I'm not sure if there's a formal astronomical definition for this, but if 
you're talking about the PA of star B as seen from star A, then it would seem 
to make sense to define PA as the angle of the great circle where it passes 
through star A. This will not be the same as the PA of A as seen from B. 
Consider a star on the celestial
  equator (and to give a more concrete example, lets assume it's on the 
meridian- hour angle 0). Now consider a great circle going through that star at 
a 45 degree angle (say, in the NE-SW direction. Then the PA of any star B 
that's on this great circle in the NE direction from star A is 45, as seen from 
star A. But what is the direction of star A as seen from star B? If the 
separation is small, the PA will be very close to 225 (180+45, or SW). But if 
you go far enough along that great circle to its point of greatest dec (this 
would be at hour angle 18, and at +45 dec), then when the circle goes through 
that point, at that point the circle is tangent to a circle of constant dec. So 
the PA of star A as seen from that point is 270.

  IOW, the compass heading of a plane flying a great circle route between two 
distant cities is not constant.

  -John 



   

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