Dialists,

In my mind I wanted to make a try for a polar ceiling dial at latitude 52
degrees, mid
Netherlands.

In the attached picture you see the mirror M at a distance g from the
ceiling.
The polar pattern for this configuration is drawn below left and I want to
have
the hours 8 am - 4 pm on the dial, if possible. ( no longitude correction in
this story )

The line BC then is about the limit of the space I need on the ceiling, or
with
other words, the mirror should be inward the room over a distance AB.

Let's now have a look if the sun will shine on the mirror all year at noon.
It's obvious that I need to look for the limits at summer solstice.

It is seen that during the summer solstice the sun can't shine on the mirror
at all.

The first change I need to make is to cut of the ceiling at the line PCQ in
which C is the intersection point of the summer ray and the ceilng.

In the hourline pattern the hours before 10 am and after 2 pm will be cut of
too and the first conclusion is that at summer solstice the dial is useable
from about 10 am to 2 pm.

However, there are more things to concider.

In this configuration the mirror will catch the sun at summer solstice only
at noon.
Shortly before and after noon the mirror is in the shade.

To see this we need to imagine a vertical south facing dial through AM with
a (pin)gnomon of length AC.
That pattern is drawn below at the right side.

At noon the edge of the ceiling gives a line of shadow KL and the mirror
just catches the sun.
Before noon and after noon this line of shadow moves down ( to the right in
the drawing ) and the mirror won't catch the sun.
It sounds strange, after noon the altitude of the sun decreases and also the
shadow on a south facing dial decreases.
Yes, this is true and can be seen with the shape of the dateline for the
summer solstice. Before and after noon this date line in going down.
So at the summer solstice my dial only gives a "flash" at noon and no
more.......

The third problem to concider is the width of the window.
Because the mirror is inside the room the azimut of the lines from mirror
through the edges of the window also will give limitations
For this an analemmatic dial or Oughtred dial could be of use to see what
the limitations are.

Who will show us the first real polar-mirror-ceiling dial?
Who has an inclined ceiling, higher at the south end?
Won't that be better?

Fer.

Fer J. de Vries
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.iae.nl/users/ferdv/
Eindhoven, Netherlands
lat.  51:30 N      long.  5:30 E






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