Actually the main factor of determining observed sunset/sunrise times vs 
calculated ones are temperature gradients of the local atmosphere rather than 
than the absolute temperature/humidity/pressure... sunset being more disturbed 
than sunrise.   Local effects of several minutes have been observed.   And once 
you get near the poles all bets are off.

How you define solar noon is also an issue.  Most people would say it is when 
the sun is highest in the sky,  but it is really when the sun crosses 180 
degrees azimuth (0 degrees in the southern hemisphere).   The two different 
methods can be a couple of minutes apart.

The sun elevation angle changes very slowly near solar noon which makes finding 
the exact peak more error prone than the azimuth angle which changes quite 
rapidly.  Lady Heather uses the elevation angle near the equator (are you 
really in the northern or southern hemisphere?) and near the poles 
(longitude/azimuth gets fuzzy).  Azimuth angle is used everywhere else. 


------------------

> I would also say that variations in air pressure, humidity and
temperature will alter the atmospheric refraction and therefore the
actual rise and set times by up to approx. 20-30 seconds
_______________________________________________
time-nuts mailing list -- [email protected]
To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.

Reply via email to