David Burch - Celestial Navigation - A Complete Home Study Course, Second Edition-Starpath Publications (2015)
David Burch - Celestial Navigation - A Complete Home Study Course, Second Edition-Starpath Publications (2015)
David Burch - Celestial Navigation - A Complete Home Study Course, Second Edition-Starpath Publications (2015)
Navigation
A Complete Home Study Course
Second Edition
by
David Burch
Copyright © 1978, 2008, 2017, 2020 Starpath Corporation
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information storage or retrieval
system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
ISBN 978-0-914025-46-7
Published by
Starpath Publications
3050 NW 63rd Street, Seattle, WA 98107
Manufactured in the United States of America
www.starpathpublications.com
10 9 8 7
Introduction
About this Book
Are You Nervous About Learning Celestial Navigation?
How to do the Home Study Course
Frequently Asked Questions
Tools of the Trade
Celestial Terminology
How this Book is Structured
Chapter 2. Sextants
2.1 About Sextants
2.2 How to Take a Sight
2.3 How to read a Sextant
2.4 Exercise on Sextant Reading
2.5 New Terminology
Appendix
A1. Glossary
List of Abbreviations
A2. Answers
Examples with Full Work Form Solutions
A3. Table Selections
A4. Work Forms
Index
About the Author
Preface
Our goal is to teach readers how to do celestial navigation and do it well. This book evolved from interactions with many thousands of students over the
past 20 years, both in the classroom and in online training. The structure of the book reflects that which we have learned. One influence of that experience
was to break up the early study between tables and number crunching with hands on plotting exercises. Another is to teach how to do it as quickly as
possible up front, and only after that, or during that, do we fill in details of the practice and theory. The goal is to get readers carrying out the full process
from beginning to end, so they can then be practicing the process and catching mistakes early, as we slowly add the background. In short, the background
goes to the back.
Practical, self-reliant celestial navigation is easy to do. It is done basically the same today as it was 100 years ago, and as it will likely be done 100
years from now. We risk losing sight of that if we choose to understand all the math and science background before getting started on the actual navigation,
which itself requires no math beyond arithmetic. We have a proven compromise at hand. There are “In-Depth” references to the back of the book at each
stage of the learning for those who are more comfortable having the background at hand. Many readers, however, will follow the background more readily
once they know how it works in practice.
We have also learned that a well-designed work form is key to versatile cel nav practice. Our unique forms guide you through the process, step by step.
They make all sights essentially the same, and provide an easy reminder of the next step at each stage.
Preface to the Second Edition
We are pleased to say that after 10 more years of using this text we do not find reason to change the basic approach and methods of the teaching. We still
use most of the same examples, which are now quite old, but that is the beauty of celestial navigation. It has not changed; so we do not benefit in any way
from making all new examples, which would bring with them more chance of error in a book of many numbers.
We have, however, notably improved and expanded the book. Each section has been updated and reformatted for a clearer presentation, often in
response to student questions over the years. New graphics have been added and older ones all updated. There is new content in the text, especially in the
“In-Depth” chapter including more detailed discussion of the sailings and more background on the principles. And new sections on general ocean
navigation tactics and new sections on optimizing the fixes. We have also updated the electronic navigation section, and we no longer explain systems we
will never see again!
Starpath instructors remain at hand to answer questions about the subject and we maintain an online support page for this book at
www.starpath.com/celnavbook.
Acknowledgements
This book has benefited from the input from many students over the years and we remain grateful to have this ongoing practical feedback. For the Second
Edition we received much appreciated help from Lanny Petitjean who reviewed the full text with valuable suggestions throughout. And we are pleased to
thank Captain Louise Orion of Blue Planet Cruising for sharing her expertise in both celestial navigation and editing by providing many useful suggestions
to Chapter 10.
INTRODUCTION
About this Book
These study materials (text, examples, and practice exercises, along with the table selections and work forms in the Appendix) are used for classroom,
home study, and online courses throughout the US. With home study, readers do not have the benefit of classroom discussion, but they do have the benefit
of using materials that more than 30,000 celestial navigation students have used before them. Hopefully most of the questions that might come up are
already answered.
The materials you have in this book are the basis for all three learning formats. For those who might like a classroom course, the Calendar section of
starpath.com lists courses around the country that use this textbook and related materials. Online courses are also available that provide direct contact with
instructors and individually graded practice quizzes. Various levels of certification are also available.
Without either of those options, however, we feel confident you can learn practical and versatile celestial navigation from these materials alone,
studying at home on your own. Thousands have done so, and gone on to cross oceans or circumnavigate the globe.
Hands-on instruction with sextant sights might seem like the main factor missed in home-study learning, but here too, our experience with so many past
students helps again. We have a thorough section on sextant handling and how to read the dials, along with crucial steps to taking good sights. Follow these
procedures and you will learn quickly how to use the sextant.
In fact, the challenge of using a sextant is not as high as one might guess from scuttlebutt on the topic. The ingenuity of sextant design is not its ability
to measure accurate angles—this could be done on land two centuries before sextants were invented—but rather it was its unique double reflection design
that lets you measure accurate angles when you are bouncing around in a seaway. Standing still on a beach or the edge of a lake, you will learn the process
quickly, and the ingenuity of the instrument design will let you carry these new-found skills on to the rolling platform of a boat at sea.
Also, you will learn shortly that a real beauty of celestial navigation is its transparency. If you make a mistake, it will be obvious, and if you keep
careful records of all the data that went into the sight process and analysis, you will be able to find that mistake. If you have a friend or teacher who is
familiar with celestial navigation, they can also look at the data and help you learn what went wrong. Part of the learning process is exactly that. Learning
the pitfalls of possible mistakes and how to avoid them. This course offers so many practice examples that you will have this under control before you set
off. It is obviously much better to make all the mistakes on land, and save your time at sea for other matters.
The various subjects covered in our materials, and the relative emphasis given them in the course, is based on the latest information on these subjects—
some of which is changing, though most is not—and our actual experience at sea (mostly under sail) covering more than 70,000 miles, of which about 25%
were navigated by celestial alone (See Hawaii by Sextant, Starpath Publications, 2014). We concentrate on practical matters, presented and explained in a
manner that we have learned (from classroom experience) suits most students best.
The various procedures of celestial navigation are presented in a step-by-step manner, with numerous examples and many practice problems. This is a
practical approach, but not a cookbook approach. We delegate the astronomical and mathematical backbones of celestial navigation to Chapter 10 because
these details can in fact distract from learning how to do it. We can promise, however, that by the end of the course, you will know how to do it, and do it
well, and also know how it works.
You will notice that some of the practice examples and sample data pages date from the late 70’s, when we first started teaching celestial navigation.
Don’t be alarmed by these dates. The Nautical Almanac pages that we teach from that originated in 1978 are identical to those printed today, and likely will
be the same 30 years from now. One might be tempted to change all the examples to the present date to make them look up to date, but in reality there is no
difference in the learning whatsoever, and by not doing this we avoid the chance of introducing typographic errors. There are a lot of numbers in a course
on cel nav, so this is an important step toward maintaining the integrity of the materials.
More Support?
For extra help see www.starpath.com/celnavbook. There are multiple resources there related to this book and the general study of celestial navigation,
including several organizations and discussion groups that specialize in cel nav. There are also links to schools around the country that use this text for their
courses. Sextants and related tools and materials are also available.
Celestial Terminology
Learning celestial navigation can be thought of in terms of several goals:
• Learning how to use a sextant to take sights (usually mastered in a few hours with good instructions).
• Learning how to use a dozen or so new tables (similar to learning to use a phone book or tide table for the first time).
• Learning a bookkeeping procedure for what to do with the numbers we get from the tables (we use a work form to guide us through this step; the only
math required is adding and subtracting).
• Learning a new plotting procedure for putting the numerical results onto a chart (takes only an hour or so to master using our instructions).
• Learning a couple dozen or so new terms, which is the subject of this section.
Many of the terms to be used are already familiar, but we need to add precision to the meanings. Some celestial terms have recognizable origins (i.e.,
zenith is indeed the point overhead, as sextant angle is indeed the angle we measure with a sextant), but many terms have obscure names (sextant angle is
usually called sextant height or sextant altitude; zenith distance is actually an angle, not a distance; ZD stands for zone description, not zenith distance, and
so on). There is a temptation to rename some terms to simplify the learning (which some books give in to), but in the long run this is a serious disservice. It
is best to stick with traditional terminology so everyone can speak the same language and read the same books.
Keeping these terms straight does not come instantly, but slowly it falls into place. To help with this, there is a thorough glossary at the back of the
book, and we list new terms at the end of each Chapter.
Glossary
At the end of each chapter we include a list of the new terms defined or introduced in that chapter. The defined terms might appear later in the text
without further definition. Please double-check these terms in the Glossary to complete that Chapter.
The Glossary is meant to be more than just a list of definitions. There are details there that do not appear elsewhere in the book. Also, frequent
questions about more technical meanings of some terms are answered only in the Glossary to keep this information from distracting from the course. In this
sense, the Glossary is a mini encyclopedia.
As the course progresses and more terms are introduced, refer to the Glossary frequently to remind yourself of the meanings and interrelationships of
the various terms.
Abbreviations
Cel nav is filled with abbreviations. We stick with the standard abbreviations for standard terms regardless of our own interpretation of the logic. Then
when referring to standard references you will be at home. This terminology is part of the learning process, i.e., ZD is zone description, not zenith distance,
which is a lower-case z. Likewise, Z is a relative bearing (azimuth angle) whereas Zn is a true bearing (azimuth), and so on.Í
To help with this we have a list of abbreviations at the end of the Glossary, which could be a useful resource. We have also added a few editorial ones
that are not standard to simplify the presentation, such as NA for Nautical Almanac, and T-2 to refer to the second table in our Table Selections.
Tables Selections
This section provides all the table data needed to work the standard exercises in the book. These are historic values in some cases, but this does not
affect the learning as the procedures and table layouts have not changed. For your own navigation at home or underway you will need access to full sets of
the sight reduction tables and a current Nautical Almanac, both are available online as free downloads (www.starpath.com/celnavbook).
...In Depth
11.1 Bowditch and other Resources
Our text is self-contained, providing all the information required for safe efficient navigation, but the quest for more details may come up, so we list standard and unique resources in
this section...
...In Depth
11.2 Taking Your Departure
There are navigation procedures from the early days of sailing ships that have wandered out of the textbooks, but some remain valuable in modern times. In this section we help one
wander back in...
CHAPTER 1
BACKGROUND & OVERVIEW
...In Depth
11.3 Electronic Navigation at Sea
This is a course on cel nav, not electronics, but it still helps to keep all navigation options in perspective, so we add these notes on GPS and other electronic aids...
The previous discussion is not meant to imply that electronics are not worthwhile. I would be the first to want them all on board for an ocean passage,
as would any insurance company... or Admiralty Court if a question of liability ever arose. The main point is, despite the convenience of electronic
navigation, celestial equipment and your knowledge of how to use it are the things you can count on. In actual practice, you might well end up using GPS
most of the time, but it still must be checked periodically with celestial. When it comes to confidence in a position, there is not much that can beat three star
lines crossing at the same point on your plotting sheet. Furthermore, one must realistically admit that GPS on a small boat at sea will someday fail, and this
can just as well happen when it matters as when it doesn’t. It is outright certain that it will one day fail. Ask anyone who has sailed a yacht for a long
distance in the ocean. If theirs has not failed, they know someone whose has. The practical approach is to learn celestial, practice it till you are confident
with it, and then use GPS whenever you can.
Celestial navigation is aesthetically satisfying, and it is part of the tradition of the sea that makes sailing so attractive. But it does take some time to do
right, which can be at a premium to the skipper underway. As far as manning the boat is concerned, a GPS is worth about a quarter of a crew member on a
long ocean passage. Prudent ocean navigation by celestial alone will take someone about one quarter of their on-watch time to do the job.
The reference line for longitude is the north–south line running through Greenwich, England. Longitude is measured relative to the Greenwich
meridian, which is also called the Prime Meridian. This choice of reference is based on historical and political developments. The Greenwich meridian does
not have special physical or geographical significance, as the equator does. To say where we are around the earth we say how far we are east or west of the
Greenwich meridian. The longitude at the Greenwich meridian is 0°. The meridian at longitude 180°, the longitude line on the opposite side of the earth
from the Greenwich meridian, is called the International Date Line. When one sails across this line from either direction, the local date changes by one day.
Time and longitude are inseparably related in navigation, as we shall see in many examples throughout this course.
An east–west line of constant latitude is called a parallel of latitude—along our northwestern boundary, the Canadian border is at the 49th parallel. A
north–south line of constant longitude is called a meridian of longitude.
Besides describing the location of places, we can also use latitude and longitude to describe the location of heavenly bodies. The location of a star, for
example, is the latitude and longitude of the point on earth directly below the object. A person standing at the location of the sun sees the sun directly
overhead. Since the earth turns, and the sun and stars are fixed in space, the locations of the sun and stars circle the earth once a day. The sun or a star is
said to be “on our meridian” or “crossing our meridian” when it bears due north or south, regardless of its height in the sky. To navigators, the meridian
passage of the sun defines the time of local apparent noon.
This system of telling where the stars are located in terms of the latitude and longitude on earth that lies below them is the only logical way to do it. At
any given time, this is a unique way to pin point its location that is valid for all people on earth. During a long-distance call to Hawaii, for example, we
cannot meaningfully discuss the location of the star Arcturus in terms of bearings and heights above the horizon, since we would each see the star at
different heights and bearings as we spoke. But we could talk about the location of the star as the point below it, because that point is unique. As the course
proceeds, we shall see that by knowing the location of that point, we will be able to predict what the height and bearing of the star would be from any point
on earth.
For several purposes in navigation and meteorology, it is convenient to divide the globe into latitude bands according to the relationship of the sun to
the earth. The three regions are: the tropics, the latitudes, and the polar regions.
The tropics are defined as the central belt of the earth extending from latitude 23.4° S to 23.4° N. We write this latitude in this decimal form instead of
the more common equivalent form of 23° 24’ to draw your attention to the accidental numerical sequence (2-3-4) that makes this an easy number to
remember. There are several emergency techniques in celestial navigation that are benefited by knowing this latitude precisely, although it is certainly not
at all critical to know this for routine celestial. (23.44 would be a bit better, but the latter is easier to remember.)
...In Depth
11.4 Mercator Charts.
Outside of the polar regions, nautical charts are based on a Mercator projection. This note explains the unique properties of these charts and why this is a good choice for navigators at
sea and on land.
The special latitude of 23.4° comes about because the earth’s rotation axis is tilted 23.4° relative to the plane of its orbit around the sun. Because of this
tilt, the sun can be viewed directly overhead only from within the tropics. During the winter, the sun is overhead at some latitude in the southern tropics;
during the summer, the sun circles the earth over the northern tropics. (Throughout this book, we refer to summer and winter as they are defined in the
Northern Hemisphere. In the Southern Hemisphere, these seasons are reversed. July and August are called summer months in the United States; in
Australia, they are called winter months.)
The two polar regions are defined as latitudes greater than 66.6°, north or south. These regions are unique as the only places on earth where the sun can
remain above or below the horizon for more than one day. In one sense the polar regions are the opposite of the tropics—the latitude 66.6° comes from 90°
minus 23.4°.
Everywhere between the tropics and the polar regions, that is, between 23.4° and 66.6°, is called the temperate latitudes, or just the latitudes. In this
book the phrase “northern latitudes” refers to the general region in the Northern Hemisphere north of the tropics and south of the polar region.
These latitude regions are of significance to navigation because we can navigate by the position of the sun. They are important to meteorology because
the position of the sun, or at least the average position of the sun, causes the weather. There are no similar divisions of the earth according to longitude—
because of the daily rotation of the earth, the earth is essentially symmetric in the east–west direction.
In modern ocean navigation, precise positions are usually recorded as degrees, minutes, and tenths of minutes (48° 39.7’), as opposed to degrees,
minutes, and seconds (48° 39’ 42”). You will see the latter notation in USCG Light Lists, but almost never in ocean navigation.
Nautical Miles
It is easy to think of latitude differences in terms of nautical miles, because the nautical mile was invented for just this purpose. One nautical mile is
defined as the distance on earth equal to a latitude change of one arc minute. Or in terms of degrees:
Common Conversions
≈ 6,000 ft
≈ 1’ of latitude
1 meter ≈ 3.28 ft
This relationship is the key to the language of navigation. If my latitude is 10° N, I am 600 nautical miles north of the equator. If I am to sail from the
Columbia River (46° N) due south to San Diego (33° N), then I must sail south for 13°, or a distance of 780 nautical miles (13 × 60 = 780). A nautical mile
is just over 6,000 ft; it is 15% longer than a statute mile. In this book, the words mile and nautical mile are used interchangeably; any reference to miles
means nautical miles. See Figure 1.4-4.
Figure 1.4-4 Distances on a Mercator chart can be measured with the latitude scale, 1’ of latitude = 1 nmi. Charts at scale of 1:40,000 or larger include a miles scale; on smaller scales we
must use the latitude grid at about the same latitude we care about on the chart.
For longitude degrees, however, the conversion to miles is not as simple. The problem is the the meridians or longitude lines get closer together as you
go north or south of the equator, so the number of miles between them decreases as the latitude increases. At the equator 1° of longitude does equal 60
nautical miles—in fact, this is very nearly true throughout the tropics. But as you go farther from the equator, this is no longer a good approximation. At
latitude 48°, there are only 40 nautical miles to a degree of longitude. The precise number for any latitude can be read from a nautical chart or plotting sheet
of the area.
If the sum of the minutes is over 60’, rewrite the result by subtracting 60’ from it and adding 1° to the degrees part. Likewise, if the degrees part is over
360°, subtract 360° from it to get back to the primary angle. Example:
Sometimes we must subtract a large number from a smaller one. If this occurs in just the minutes part of the problem, we solve this by borrowing 1°
from the degrees part. In other words, rewrite the angle by subtracting 1° from the degrees part and adding 60’ to the minutes part. Example:
If we must subtract a large angle from a smaller one, the first step is to add 360° to the small one. Then proceed as before. Example:
If both the degrees part and the minutes part are smaller, do the same, but write the 360° as 359° 60’. Example:
If we must sum a column of angles with some positive and some negative, there are several ways to go about it. We could go down the list doing them
two at a time, or we could add all the positive angles into one sum and then add all the negative angles into another sum, and then subtract the negative sum
from the positive sum.
The easiest way to solve this problem, however, is to use a calculator that does accumulative sums. Most calculators, even the very inexpensive ones,
can do this. With these you just go down the list entering the numbers (±) as they occur; the accumulated sum keeps track of the right sign. If you are
summing the minutes part and the result is negative, just add 60’ to it and subtract 1° from the degrees column. If the sum of the minutes is greater than 60’,
subtract 60’ and add 1° to the degrees column. Calculator examples:
Practice problems are in the next section. Again, this is all the mathematics we need, but we are not allowed to make mistakes. We shall soon see that a
1’ error in our arithmetic translates into a position error of about 1 nautical mile—and possibly more. If we look up a number in a table and it is 334° and
we copy it to our work form as 343°, we are in for a 600-or-700-mile error.
Nearly all mistakes in celestial navigation are mistakes in arithmetic or in copying down a number—or copying a number from the wrong table page.
Fortunately, most errors of this type result in a fix that is way off our known approximate position, and we catch the error. But usually we won’t spot the
mistake until near the end of our work, which may take 30 minutes or so. Thus going slow, checking and double-checking along the way always pays off.
...In Depth
11.5 Timekeeping in Navigation
Practical timekeeping in navigation is easy if we keep it simple, but there are numerous ways to complicate the matter, so it is valuable to review the unnecessary options we are
avoiding.
Half the battle in all navigation is notation. It pays to be precise in the way we write down times. We recommend writing h, m, and s to label the hours,
minutes, and seconds part of any time. It may seem awkward at first, but it will minimize mistakes. Any notation we can use that minimizes mistakes is
beneficial. For example:
10:45 a.m. = 10h 45m,
10:45 p.m. = 22h 45m,
2:20:30 a.m. = 02h 20m 30s,
5:04:13 p.m. = 17h 04m 13s.
If you get stuck while working on your own, the following detailed rules should guide you through any type of angle or time problem.
To do a subtraction problem, first rewrite minutes and seconds such that you are subtracting a small number from a bigger one. Example:
which is the same as
which is now in a form that can be solved. If you notice that the hours are also too small—that is, you are going to get a negative time—then add on 24
hours to begin with. If you also notice that the minutes and seconds need help, take some from the 24 hours as you add it, that is, add 23h 59m 60s instead
of 24h. Examples:
Whenever you add 24 hours, you must subtract one day; when you subtract 24 hours, you add one day.
Without a doubt, the most important thing to learn about celestial navigation as soon as possible is the practice of continuously checking your work.
When you get a number from a table, check and double-check that you are in the right place in the right table. And when you do your arithmetic, do it twice
to check yourself. Mistakes in the minutes column may not stand out so clearly; you just get a bad fix.
Sextant Use
Sextant usage can be learned from a manual or textbook, but it is quickest to have it demonstrated by an experienced navigator. These days there are
many videos online that show the process, but like much information online we must carefully evaluate what we see. Look at several not just one, and keep
in mind what we say here about the process. We have seen some that are well made and indeed start out nicely, but then toward the end they spin out, and
expose a limited experience in actually taking sights underway. Also check www.starpath.com/videos.
Sextant use is readily learned; exceptional skills and extensive training are not required. Don’t worry if you have learned on land with shorelines or
artificial horizons and not yet practiced at sea. Sights are often easier at sea than they are on land, even with some motion of the boat to contend with.
Sextants do what they are supposed to–allow you to measure vertical angles precisely from a moving platform.
To do sextant sights, you go on deck with a sextant and your watch, along with paper and pencil to record the sights. A small notebook dedicated to this
use is convenient. The sights are generally taken standing at some place with good visibility and some means of support. On a sailboat, this is often on the
after deck or amidships next to the shrouds. In rougher seas, it is best to wrap an arm around shrouds or stays during the sights—or wrap the short tether of
your safety harness around the shrouds and lean back. Some system is needed to free both hands to operate the sextant while still providing support against
sudden boat motion. It is difficult to imagine any reason to go forward of the mast with a sextant. If sails block your view, alter course briefly for the sight.
Large sextant adjustments are made by squeezing the lever on the index arm and then moving the arm along the arc. Smaller adjustments are made by
turning the micrometer drum. When reading a sextant, degrees are read from the arc opposite an index mark on the arm; minutes are read from the
micrometer drum opposite an index mark on the arm. The index mark on the micrometer drum is often the zero point of a Vernier scale that is used to read
tenths of minutes. In most cases, the tenths can be adequately estimated without use of a Vernier scale. A later section of this chapter covers sextant reading
with practice problems.
2.2 How to Take a Sight
Before going on deck, record a log reading and corresponding watch time in your sight notebook. Also record the course and speed. This will be used later
to correct the sights for boat motion during the sight session itself, which might take up to 45 minutes. Double check that no one has imminent plans to
alter course significantly or to do major sail changes that might create havoc around you.
The sighting procedure begins with a check of the Index Correction (IC). Set the sextant to 0° 0’ and look toward the horizon. If the direct and reflected
views of the horizon form a smooth continuous line, there is no correction (IC = 0.0’). If not aligned, adjust the micrometer drum of the sextant to bring
them into alignment, and then read the scale. After making the adjustment, if the micrometer scale reads a small number like 2.5’, then record this number
as IC = 2.5’ “on the scale.”
When the micrometer scale reads a large number when the horizon is aligned (back of 0’) such as 58.4’ then IC is found by subtracting this reading
from 60.0’—in this case, record IC = 1.6’ “off the scale.”
Later on, we will apply this correction to the sextant reading. When doing this, the sign (±) of the correction is from the rule “If it’s on, take it off; if off,
put it on”—i.e., if a sextant reads 34° 23.5’ and the IC is 1.6’ off the scale, the corrected sextant reading is 34° 25.1’. Special care should be taken when
measuring IC, and it should be checked at each sight session. This is usually done just before evening sights or just after morning sights, so that a sharp
horizon is visible and you are not using up good twilight time. When taking a series of sun sights during the day, it could be done between the sights.
The terms index error and index correction are really the same thing. Some texts distinguish the error from the correction of the error, but this is not
important. The “on take it off” rule handles this. We go back over the IC in the next chapter on noon sights.
After the IC has been checked, record the value in your notebook even if it has not changed. This is your proof that you did indeed check it if any
question arises later on.
Next, face the object to be sighted and point the telescope of the sextant toward the horizon directly below the object. Adjust the index arm of the
sextant to bring the reflected view of the object into simultaneous view with the horizon. This is done with an initial coarse movement of the arm made
while squeezing the worm gear release, and then a fine adjustment with the micrometer or Vernier. The final adjustment must be made when the sextant is
precisely vertical, or the angle you get will be too big. With the boat heeled, rolling, and pitching, this might seem at first an impossible challenge. A
simple trick, however, solves the problem.
The final alignment is made while rocking the sextant—which means rotating it slightly to the right and then to the left (without moving the head)
about an imaginary line drawn from your eye to the object as it appears on the horizon. The motion is equivalent to a gentle rolling of the sextant about its
telescope axis without any yawing or pitching of the instrument as a whole. When the sextant is rocked the object viewed in the telescope will appear to
swing in an arc. If the instrument begins to yaw during the roll, the object will begin to slip away from the center of the horizon glass; the job then is to
adjust the heading of the sextant slightly as necessary to keep the object in view as you rock it. The sight is completed when the object just touches the
horizon at the lowest point on the arc.
To find the lowest arc point in an actual sight, the sextant has to be rocked only some 10° to the right and left, but a good way to learn and master the
motion is to greatly exaggerate the rocking angle when practicing. This will help develop your ability to keep the object in sight during unexpected boat
motions. Hold your hand steady as you rock the instrument. The sextant telescope rotates against your stationary cheek as you do this.
Fine-tune the sextant angle until you feel you have the best possible alignment of object and horizon at the lowest point of its arc, and then stop further
adjustments. Read your watch and record the time to the second. Don’t worry about the sextant reading; it won’t change. The first task is to get the time
recorded before you forget it. If you pause or get delayed between releasing the drum and reading the watch, estimate the few seconds it cost, and adjust the
time before recording it. That is, if it took you 3 seconds to read your watch (it was stuck under your cuff!), then record a time 3 seconds earlier than you
read. Then read the sextant, double-check the reading, and then record it along with the name of the object sighted.
...In Depth
11.6 Dip Short
The technique called dip short was developed long ago for doing sights from the high deck of a ship when the only option was a sun or moon over a nearby shoreline. It’s not often
such a circumstance shows up in small-craft navigation, but the method is ideal for doing practice sights using a shoreline for the horizon. Realistic sights can be taken on a lake as
small as half a mile or so across...
Figure 2.2-1 Parts of a sextant. Remember when a shade is not in use, it should be rotated all the way into the stored position and not just rotated out of the line of sight.
Complete the round of sights, store the sextant, and then make a final log and corresponding watch time entry into your notebook. Also confirm in your
notebook that the course remained constant during the sights, although you would have known of any changes during the sight session as soon as anyone
else, because you were watching the stars all this time. Recall that you recorded course and speed before starting, but now you can compute the actual
average speed that you had. Just subtract the two log readings and subtract the two times and divide the distance run by that time interval to get your
average speed.
Sight Notes
For sun or moon sights use the bottom edge (lower limb) when available. When the lower limb is obscured, use the upper limb, and adjust the sextant
until the top edge just skims the horizon when rocked.
Shades are provided for sun sights to reduce the glare of the sun and horizon. Horizon shades are not often required, but index shades are nearly always
needed for the sun. Choose any combination of shades that leaves the sun’s disk prominent but not so bright as to distract your judgment of its alignment
with the horizon.
Sun and moon sights can be taken any time of the day they are visible and well above the horizon. Star and planet sights must be taken during twilight
when both the objects and the horizon are visible. Evening star sights begin when you can first see the stars (through the sextant telescope), and they end
when you can no longer discern the horizon. Morning sights begin when you can first see the horizon, and they end when you can no longer see the stars.
During specific periods of the year, Venus sights can be taken throughout the day. These are fairly rare sights that require good sextant optics and very
clear skies in addition to a fortuitous location of the planet.
To bring the sun or moon down to the horizon in the view through the telescope, it can be helpful to estimate its angular height above the horizon and
set the sextant to that value to begin with. Vertical angles can be estimated by hand at a comfortable outstretched arm’s length. Thumb to forefinger of an
outstretched hand is approximately 15º; thumb to tip of the little finger is more like 25º. Sitting at home with your sextant you can calibrate your hand span
by noting what it spans on a nearby building or terrain and then use the sextant to measure what that is as an angle.
Precomputation
Star or planet sights are best prepared for with a process called precomputation. We have not yet covered how to do this, but it means using your cel
nav books to determine what the height should be from what you think is your correct position. It generally takes just a few minutes. The answer won’t be
precisely right, but it does not have to be. You are effectively seeing a span of approximately 300 nmi (5º) vertically in the sextant telescope.
Figure 2.2-2 View through the sextant telescope, with a traditional split mirror on the left and the full-view or whole horizon on the right.
Precomputation gives us both the height and the bearing of the object, and again we do not care if the bearing is not precise. We pan the horizon in
about the right direction and we find the body. Then, at the twilight time used for precomputation, set the sextant to the precomputed height, and look in the
precomputed direction. The object will appear near the horizon, and the sight can be completed in the normal manner. Precomputation can be carried out by
standard sight reductions using any sight reduction tables or, more readily, using Pub. 249 Vol. 1 or the 2102-D Star Finder, both of which are covered later
in the book. Precomputed evening sights are easy and accurate because they can be taken early, in the brighter part of twilight while the horizon is still a
sharp line. Precomputation of morning twilight sights facilitates the actual sight taking, but is not so crucial to star ID since you have as long as you wish to
study the sky while waiting for the horizon to appear. Occasionally, daytime moon sights must also be precomputed to locate a faint moon in a bright or
cloudy sky.
Figure 2.2-3 The angle measured by the sextant is from the horizon up to the celestial body. The higher we are, the farther we see over the horizon, so the angle is slightly larger than it
should be (way exaggerated in this sketch). This is corrected for with the dip correction, which is based on the height of the eye above the water.
Do quick, minor adjustments while it is in view in the chosen direction, then stop when the object slips out of view but don’t move, and wait for it to
reappear before making further adjustments. The sights take longer—and they test your patience—but in the end, they can be just as good as those taken in
calmer water.
Figure 2.2-4 Why we rock the sextant. If the sextant is not vertical to the horizon, we read a value that is too large. The simple process of rocking the instrument (rolling it without yawing).
Various optical and mechanical gadgets have been proposed to help judge this alignment, but most just get in the way. Rocking is easy to learn and all that is needed to take professional
sights.
Figure 2.2-5 View though the sextant scope showing a star aligned with the horizon—very schematically. In practice a star will be a dot, and it will just touch the solid sea horizon when
right.
Figure 2.2-6 View through the sextant telescope as you rock the sextant and adjust the micrometer to align the body with the horizon. Try setting the star or sun just above the horizon, read
the dial, then right on the horizon, and read, then the same amount below and read. This gives a good feeling for the accuracy possible with the instrument. The diameter of the sun is about
32’
Waves will occasionally block the horizon when you are ready to make an adjustment. When this happens, you might have to skip that cycle of boat
motion and wait for the next. The true horizon will appear as a smooth steady straight line, whereas intervening waves are irregular and moving. If this
approach of waiting out the motion is not followed and you try to keep the object in view as the boat bounces around, false adjustments are the usual result,
and the process becomes quite frustrating.
...In Depth
11.7 Solar Index Correction
Using the horizon is one way to measure the index correction and often the best choice underway, but if we really want to home in on accuracy, and get confidence that the values are
right independent of subsequent sights, then reverting back to the methods of Lewis and Clark is the key to dependable results...
Step 1
Notice that index marks align exactly with the numbers. The degrees increase when you move the index arm to the left, out away from you. The minutes increase as you "unscrew" the micrometer drum,
counterclockwise.
Step 2
Notice that the index mark on the arc is past the 56, about one third of the way to the 57. We can't tell that it is one third exactly, but we can tell that it is less than half. The minutes must be less than 30,
as they are. The minutes align exactly with 19.0.
Caution: A possible mistake is to read the scales the wrong way and interpret this as 21'. Always check which direction is increasing before reading the dial. This type of error could be 2' (i.e., 19 vs
21) or as large as 8' (i.e., 16 vs 24). The smaller ones might be hard to detect later on.
Step 3
In cases like these, first check the minutes on the drum so you can interpret the degrees on the arc. After checking the direction, you see this is 58', or almost one full degree. So the degrees part of the
angle must be just under 56, not just over it. Caution: Always double-check your readings, especially when the degrees marker is almost exactly lined up. This type of error, however, is a large one that
will usually be apparent in a series of sights of the same object.
Step 4
If the sextant looked like this after aligning the reflected and direct views of the horizon, the instrument would have no index error. During actual sights, however, always record that you have checked it,
even if it was zero.
Step 5
Notice that the index mark on the arc is barely past the 0° mark. In many cases you cannot tell if it is to the left (on the scale) or to the right (off the scale). The drum reading, however, will always clarify
this.
In this example, the index mark is halfway between the second and third mark, so the IC would be 2.5' on the scale. Notice, however, that without a Vernier scale, we cannot really say if this is exactly
2.5. It could be 2.4 or 2.6.
Step 6
For IC checks, you must nearly always tell from the minutes on the drum if you are off or on the scale. It will not be apparent on the arc for small corrections. Be careful to count in the right direction;
this reads 58', not 2'. Alternatively, you can note that it is off the scale, and then count the IC backward. In this case, it reads 58 forward, which is the same as 2 backward. With fractional readings (such
as 58.7'), however, one must be careful with this, as covered later on.
This clever arrangement of scales was an important invention from the early 1600’s. Notice in Figure 2.3-2 that the parallel scales are similar, except
that the divisions on the Vernier scale are smaller: five divisions on the Vernier span only four divisions on the drum. The scale in Figure 2.3-2 reads 47.0’
because the index mark (or zero mark) of the Vernier scale aligns exactly with the 47 on the drum. Notice, in this case, that the last mark on the Vernier
scale also aligns exactly with one of the drum marks (51 in this case). This is the way we tell that a drum reading is exact: the first and last Vernier marks
align precisely with two marks on the drum scale.
When the drum reading is not exact, the index mark of the Vernier will not align with a drum mark, but one of the subsequent Vernier marks will. The
Vernier mark that lines up is the one that tells us the tenths. Each Vernier mark is 0.2’ In Figure 2.3-1, the proper reading is 47.6’, because the third Vernier
mark aligns with a drum mark. Notice that this third mark is the only one that lines up with a corresponding drum mark.
Some Vernier scales are marked with numbers to help with the reading (as in Figure 2.3-3), but most are not. Scales with a dot or arrow marking the
zero point and no other labeling are common. Our job, then, is to check the alignment, count the marks, and figure the tenths—then double-check it.
Figure 2.3-3 Vernier reads 26.8'
Some Verniers are marked in individual tenths (showing ten divisions instead of just five; quite nice, if you find one), but most are in two-tenth
intervals. When the Vernier is marked in two tenths, we have a problem with odd tenths. A 0.3 reading, for example, will not show a single exact
alignment, but the 0.2 and 0.4 marks will be in closer alignment than any other, and these two will be equally unaligned in opposite directions, as shown in
Figure 2.3-4. When there is no single mark aligned, look for two that are equally close. Always check the drum, however, to see that you are about right;
that is, make a rough estimate from the drum reading alone, and then confirm the details with a Vernier reading. If the drum and Vernier read as shown in
Figure 2.3-4 during an index error check, the index error would be 60 - 58.3, or IC = 1.7’ off the scale.
Not all high-quality sextants have Verniers and in practice you won’t really lose accuracy by estimating the tenths. Generally there are uncertainties in
individual sights that cause uncertainties and fluctuations in measurements of approximately 0.2’ to 0.3’, even with good instruments, in good conditions,
and in experienced hands. Nevertheless, if you have one, it is good practice to use it. On the other hand, there is no justification for using a Vernier reading
on a Davis Mark 15 or 25 plastic sextant. These readings are not accurate enough to justify this extra precision. (The Davis Mark 3 model, on the other
hand, relies on a Vernier to read the 2’ precision it offers.)
Figure 2.5-1 Sample sextant pictures. Clockwise from top-left: Tamaya Jupiter, Astra 3b, Davis Mark 3, and Davis Mark 15.
...In Depth
11.8 Optimizing Plastic and Metal Sextant Sights
Often disparaged by those who have not taken the time to learn how to use them, these light weight instruments can do the job well—and how we optimize sights with them is the
same as we should do with metal sextants...
CHAPTER 3
NOON SIGHTS (LAN)
In this chapter, Section 3.1 gives an overview of the full noon sight process; then we back up in Section 3.2 and go step-by-step through the numerical
procedures. When new terms appear, it might be useful to check the Glossary for more explanation. New terms are listed in Section 3.6.
This chapter introduces the use of several key tables and how to move around in the study materials from text, to tables, to answers, etc. By the end of
this chapter you will have completed about 75% of the total learning process for celestial navigation.
As the earth turns beneath the sun daily, the GP of the sun circles the earth at a constant latitude equal to its declination. If the sun passed directly over
head at noon, you would find your latitude by simply looking up the declination of the sun on that date and time in the Nautical Almanac. If the sun passed
exactly overhead you must, by definition, be at the latitude of the sun. Hence the main job of the Nautical Almanac is to tell us the precise latitudes (and
longitudes) of the GPs of all celestial bodies (sun, moon, stars, and planets) at all times.
If we were not at the sun’s latitude, the sun would not pass overhead. If you were 1° “north of the sun”—meaning your latitude was 1° north of the
sun’s declination—the sun would pass 1° south of overhead. This is the key to understanding the LAN latitude sight; it is true in every case: 30° north of
the sun, the sun passes 30° south of overhead, and so forth.
Working this reasoning backward, if we know how far down from the zenith the sun passes at LAN, we know the latitude difference between us and
the sun, and because the Nautical Almanac tells us the latitude of the sun at all times, we can figure out what our latitude must be.
In the terminology of celestial navigation, the angular distance measured from the point overhead down to the sun is called the zenith distance. This is
what we want, but we have no reference point for measuring it directly—there is no marker at the zenith. So we use a sextant and the horizon. The full
sextant angle from the horizon all the way up to the zenith is 90°. To find the zenith distance we measure the sextant height from the horizon up to the sun
and then subtract that from 90°. What is left is what we want.
And so the process goes. We measure the maximum sextant height of the sun at LAN, make a few quick corrections to it (explained shortly for the
sextant calibration, our height above the water, the atmosphere, and the angular width of the sun itself), then figure the zenith distance, look up the
declination of the sun, and then add them together to get our latitude. The reason we must sometimes take the difference between the zenith distance and
declination to get our latitude is simply because of the way latitudes and declinations are labeled North and South from the equator.
Now an example using one more special term: the height of the sun we get after making all corrections to Hs is called the observed height (Ho). Our
DR (dead reckoning) position at noon is 48° 04.0’ N, 135° 50.0’ W on July 14th, 1982. The maximum value of the sun’s height at LAN is found to be Ho-
max = 63° 32.2’, and we observed this height at a time of 21:09 UTC. Our actual navigation watch might have read something more like noon at this time,
but when we converted its reading to UTC we got this late-evening universal time. So the zenith distance = 90° - Ho = 89° 60’ - 63° 32.2’ = 26° 27.8’ (to
make the subtraction, we rewrite 90º as 89º 60.0’).
From the Nautical Almanac we find that at 21:09 UTC on July 14th, 1982 the declination of the sun is N 21° 37.8’. Now to get our latitude: Latitude =
zenith distance + declination = 26° 27.8’ + 21° 37.8’ = 48° 05.6’ N.
Finally we check that the latitude we found is reasonable; and it is—our actual latitude (the one we measured) is about 1.6’ north of our DR latitude.
The DR latitude is the latitude we thought we were at on the basis of our logbook and our most recent position fix. Since 1’ of latitude is the same as l
nautical mile, we are only 1.6 miles farther north than we thought. From that which we have done so far, we don’t know anything about our longitude.
Later we will discuss how we might use the observed UTC of LAN to tell us something about our longitude, but that’s a longer story—longer even than
many navigators want to admit. For now we stick with the latitude problem.
To complete this, let’s look at a case where you have to subtract zenith distance and declination in order to find latitude. Suppose the Ho-max of our
first example was observed at the same UTC but now from a DR position some 300 miles south of the equator at 4° 47.0’ S, 135° 50.0’ W, on our way to
the Marquesas. In this example we would be looking north to the noon sun.
The direct sextant reading (Hs-max) and the corrected version (Ho-max) would be just the same, so the zenith distance would be the same; and we are
saying that the UTC and date were the same also, so the declination of the sun was the same. But now if we added zenith distance and declination we
would get what we got before, Lat = 48° 5.6’, which we don’t have to stare at very long to know can’t be right—we are on the way to the Marquesas, not
Cape Flattery. Therefore, we subtract them: Lat = zenith distance - declination = 26° 27.8’ - 21° 37.8’ = 4° 50.0’ S, which is consistent with our DR
latitude.
Note, however, that the principles are still the same. The zenith distance (of about 26° in this case) is the latitude difference between us and the sun. The
sun was at about 21° N and we were looking north to see it. So we must be some 26° south of 21° N, which puts us at about 5° S. And so forth.
The circumstances that lead to adding versus subtracting to get Lat are illustrated in the next section when we go over the specific steps for doing the
LAN sight, but we can propose this Easy LAN Rule: find the zenith distance and declination. Then add them to find your latitude. If the result does not
make sense (i.e., far from your DR Lat), then adding must have been wrong, so subtract them. When subtracting you don’t have to worry about which to
subtract from which; always take the smaller from the larger. Later for completeness we will list precise rules that tell what to do when, but it will be rare
that you need them.
The next section covers procedural and practical details of the LAN latitude sight, including the sextant corrections mentioned earlier. Following that,
we cover the topic of finding longitude from a noon sight, and then back to more general aspects of celestial navigation, like sextants and sextant use. If
you have navigation questions, coastwise or ocean, you can get help from links at starpath.com/celnavbook.
Here is another example using what we have done so far. DR position is 30° 14.0’ N, 135° 40.0’ W, and we found Ho-max = 44° 39.6’. At the time of
the sight the sun’s declination = S 15° 10.5’. What was our latitude? Answer is 30° 9.9’ N, about 4 miles south of the DR latitude.
Figure 3.2-1 Mer. Pass. time in the Nautical Almanac is given in the bottom right-hand corner of each daily page of data. This is a section of T-2 (July, 1978) in the Table Selections. The
time listed (1206) is the UTC of the event observed from the Greenwich meridian. At your own meridian this will be midday and your watch will read near 1200, within an hour or so,
depending on the time zone of your watch and your longitude. Here we see the same value for all 3 days listed, but on other dates these times may differ by a minute from day to day.
The mer pass time listed in the Nautical Almanac is the UTC that the sun crosses the Greenwich meridian, longitude = 0°. Since the sun moves
westward at a constant rate, it is easy for us to figure out when it will cross our meridian. If we are west of Greenwich (western longitudes) our UTC of mer
pass will be later than the time listed. If we are east of Greenwich, the sun will pass us before reaching Greenwich, so the UTC of mer pass in east
longitudes occurs earlier than the time listed.
The sun, or, if you like, the GP of the sun, moves westward at a rate of 15° of longitude per hour, because the earth rotates 360º in 24 hours, which is
15º/1h. If we are 30° west of Greenwich our mer pass time will be 2 hours later than the time listed. At longitude 60° East, the sun crosses the meridian
exactly 4 hours before it reaches Greenwich. To get the UTC of mer pass for any longitude, convert your longitude to time at the rate of 15° per hour—
there is a special table for this in the Nautical Almanac—and then add it to the mer pass time listed in the Nautical Almanac when you are in west
longitudes, or subtract it when in east longitudes.
The following equations may help you remember this. Note that LAN is just another name for meridian passage, abbreviated Mer. Pass. Throughout
this book, we often abbreviate Nautical Almanac as NA.
UTC of LAN = Mer Pass time (NA) + Lon W (converted to time), or
Mer Pass time (NA) - Lon E (converted to time).
The longitude we use for this is always our DR-Lon at noon. This is just our best estimate of what our longitude will be at midday. We get it from our
latest fix projected forward using estimated course and speed. If you do this LAN time prediction well before midday while you are traveling fast in the
east-west direction it is valuable to find this projected DR-Lon and not just the present value.
The conversion from longitude degrees to time is done with the Conversion of Arc to Time table in the Nautical Almanac. It is the first page at the back
of the almanac (T-7 in the Table Selections). First look up the degrees part of your DR-Lon and then add on the minutes part. Examples are shown later.
Usually you will just ignore or round off the seconds part of your predicted time. The seconds are not accurate unless your DR-Lon is very accurate.
The accuracy of the time we figure will only be as accurate as our DR-Lon. If our DR-Lon is off by 15’, the time we figure will be off by 1 minute. To
figure uncertainties note: 15°/1 hour = 15’/1 minute. Two examples of the arc to time conversion are shown in Figure 3.2-2.
Figure 3.2-2 Two examples of arc to time conversion. The inset table is a section of table T-7 from the Table Selections.
To get started, check the Table Selections to see where these times are listed.
July 25th, 1978: mer pass sun = 12h 06m
October 27th, 1978: mer pass sun = 11h 44m
Mar. 28th, 1981: mer pass sun = 12h 05m
If, for some reason, you want to know the exact time of LAN for an exact longitude, you can get the Mer Pass time to the second using the Equation of
Time (Figure 3.2-4) The Equation of Time is the difference between the time of Mer Pass and 12h 00m 00s. The Equation of Time is listed next to the Mer
Pass time in the Nautical Almanac (Figure 3.2-1). You would use the 12h value.
Figure 3.2-3 Schematic views through a sextant telescope using a traditional split view horizon mirror—the left side is clear glass; the right side is a mirror. The sun is on the horizon at the
time of these two independent sights. The left is a standard lower-limb sight; the right is an upper-limb sight. In each case the left side is looking direct to the horizon through clear glass, but
this glass acts as a partial mirror so we often see a faint outline of what is on the mirror side, exaggerated in this schematic. Usually upper-limb sights are restricted to times when the lower
limb is obscured by clouds, as indicated here.
Figure 3.2-4 UTC of LAN at Greenwich. The Equation of Time (EqT) is 12:00 minus these times. It is given accurate to the second in the Nautical Almanac. Generally we do not know our
DR-Lon accurate enough to justify finding Mer Pass to the second, but this diagram shows how this time varies throughout the year. The tilt of the earth’s axis relative to its orbit around the
sun along with the elliptical shape of that orbit contributes to this unusual pattern.
Once you’ve made your time prediction, set an alarm clock to go off about 10 minutes earlier, and then you can forget about it till noon.
Figure 3.2-5 An LAN sight plotted to show the rise and fall of Hs. In this case LAN occurred at 13h 49m 00s WT.
If the speedometer needle was below zero when you were stopped, say 3 mph behind the zero line, then the index correction is called off the scale. In
this case you have to go 3 mph just to get the speedometer to read zero, and when your speedometer reads 35 mph, you are actually going 38 mph, and so
on.
Referring back to Figure 2.2-2, to check the index correction of a sextant, you look at the horizon through the sextant with the instrument set to 0° 0’,
and then adjust the micrometer drum until the reflected view of the horizon aligns precisely with the direct view of the horizon. Then read the minutes scale
on the drum to determine the correction and whether it is on or off the scale. If the mirrors are adjusted about right, on-scale values will read a small
number of minutes (1, 2, or 3). Off-scale corrections are a few minutes below zero, but since the drum reads from 59’ down on the back side of zero, the
actual value you read will be in the high 50s. You have to subtract what you read from 60’ to get the value of the off-scale IC.
After measuring the index correction, measure the height of the sun, note the time by your watch, and then write down Hs and the watch time in a
notebook. (Refer back to the Section 1.3 for an overview.) Then repeat this process until you note that your list of heights has definitely gone through a
maximum. You should be able to get a sight every few minutes. Then look at the list and pick the highest value of Hs. This is Hs-max, and it will tell us our
latitude.
Sometimes it is valuable to plot Hs vs. WT if there is any doubt about where the peak is located. An example is shown in Figure 3.2-5.
Don’t try to remember the sign (±) of the IC when you measure it. There is too big a chance for a mistake this way. Just record ON or OFF, and then
use the jingle when you start your paperwork.
The dip correction is a small correction that is always negative—that is, we always subtract it from Hs. This correction takes into account our elevation
above the water level as we make the sight. The higher we are, the farther it is to the visible horizon (Figure 3.2-6). And the farther we see, the more the
visible horizon dips below an imaginary plane at our feet. This makes the angles we measure slightly too big, because we are measuring Hs relative to the
visible horizon. So we must correct Hs for the Dip using a table in the Nautical Almanac.
The dip correction depends only on the height of your eye (HE) above the water line as you stand doing the sight. This is something you typically only
have to measure once, since elevations don’t change much as you wander around a small boat. Besides, this correction does not change very fast with
height. At HE = 9 ft the correction is about -3’, and you have to go to an elevation of 16 ft to increase this to -4’. (Dip = 1’ times the square root of HE, to
within a decimal point or so, with HE given in feet.)
Dip corrections are in Table A2, on the inside of the front cover of the Nautical Almanac (our Table T-8). Go down the ft. column till you find your
HE, or two values that bracket your HE, and the correction is to the left.
We will have more to say later about Dip and the Dip formula. As it turns out, this simple formula is very valuable to several aspects of navigation. It
essentially gives you the distance to the horizon, so you can use it to predict the visible range of lights and land.
Once you have IC and the Dip, apply them to Hs to get what is called the apparent height (Ha). Ha is just Hs corrected for IC and Dip:
Ha = Hs + IC(off) - Dip
Ha = Hs - IC(on) - Dip
If we had a group of people standing at the same spot on earth, but at different heights using different sextants with various index errors, they would get
different values of Hs for the height of the sun. But after they did their IC and Dip corrections, they should all end up with the same Ha. The height is
called apparent because there is still another correction to make.
Figure 3.2-6 The Dip angle makes all sextant sights (Hs) higher than they should be by a small amount that depends on the height of eye (HE) above the water. The scale here is greatly
distorted in that we see the radius of the earth (about 4,000 miles) in the same picture with an HE, which is typically 6 to 100 ft on a vessel.
Figure 3.2-7 Sample from Table T-8, showing the dip correction of -3.1’ for HE = 10 ft and an altitude correction of +11.3’ for a lower limb sun sight taken between October and March
having an Ha of 10º 40’.
Figure 3.2-8. Refraction. When light slows down entering the denser atmosphere it bends down toward the surface, causing sextant sights to appear too high.
The amount that light rays from the sun bend depends on the angle they make with the horizon. When the sun is low on the horizon, the refraction is the
greatest. It can be as large as half a degree or so when the sun is right on the horizon. But when the sun is straight overhead there is no refraction of the
light rays—they can’t bend down when they are already coming straight down on us. All light rays bend, not just those from the sun, so this correction will
be needed for all celestial sights: sun, stars, moon, and planets.
There is also a third, very small correction buried in the sun’s altitude correction. It is called parallax, but for the sun it never amounts to more than
0.1’. We will discuss this more when we get to the moon. Parallax is an important correction for the moon.
Now we see what all the sun’s altitude correction depends on: it depends on Ha, the height of the sun, because the refraction depends on the height; it
depends on whether we did a lower-limb or upper-limb sight, because it includes the semidiameter correction; and finally it depends on the month, because
the semidiameter depends on the month.
With this information at hand, you can find the altitude correction in Table A2 on the inside of the front cover of the Nautical Almanac (Table T- 8 of
the Table Selections, sample in Figure 3.2-7). Choose the appropriate side of the table for the season of your sight; choose the column for upper limb or
lower limb; go down the column to find two values of Ha that bracket your value; and the correction will be to the side of it. The sign (±) of the correction
tells you whether to add or subtract it from Ha to get Ho.
Example: Finding altitude correction
Refer to the Table Selections to check these.
(a) A November lower-limb sun sight.
Ha = 10° 40.0’
Altitude correction = + 11.3’
Ho = Ha + alt. corr.
Ho = 10° 40.0’ + 11.3’ = 10° 51.3’
That was the main job, but we aren’t quite finished. What we have so far is the declination at the even hour; we want to know it at the actual time we
observed, which will typically be some minutes later. The declination at this later time could be bigger or smaller than the value at the even hour,
depending on whether the declination is moving toward the equator or away from it during that time of year (i.e., decreasing or increasing).
What we have left to do is an interpolation: we know, for example, the declination at 20h and at 21h from the daily pages, and from this we have to
figure out what it should be at 20h 50m. It would be 50/60ths of the way between the two. However, as always in cel nav, this is done for us in a special
table—we never have to multiply in cel nav!
IMPORTANT NOTE: When we do use these special tables (Increments and Corrections) we will not be using the seconds part of the UTC to find the
declination. We use only the minutes part. During an LAN sight, this rarely offers any confusion since we won’t know the time accurate to the second
anyway. But later on when we are looking up the declination for sun lines and star lines we will know the time accurate to the second, and we will use it for
some things, but not for the declination. If you do know the UTC accurate to the second, just forget the seconds when you do the declination.
To make the declination correction for the minutes part of the UTC we must first look to see if the declination is increasing or decreasing with time on
the date of the sight. Look at the value of the declination at the next hour, or the next few hours, and that will tell you. If the declination is increasing, you
will have to add the correction; if it’s decreasing, you will subtract it. The sample table for July 24, 25, and 26 (Figure 3.2-9) shows an example of a
decreasing declination.
The size of the correction depends on two things: on the minutes part of the UTC and on how much the declination changes each hour. The first we
know; the second we find at the bottom of the sun column on the daily pages. This hourly change in the declination is called the “d-value.” For the sun the
d-value is the same all day for all 3 days listed on the daily page. So the next thing we do is record the d-value in our work form or notebook; call it (+) if
the declination is increasing or (-) if the declination is decreasing. This is just a way to remind us that we are to add or subtract the correction.
The correction itself is found in the Increments and Corrections Tables. These are the pages at the back of the Almanac (T-9 to T-12 in our Table
Selections). There is one table for each minute of the hour. Look now to the inserted table in Figure 3.2-9. Note that there are two parts to the table divided
by a double line; these are completely separate tables used for different corrections. For the declination correction that we are doing now, we only use the
right-hand part of the table. For now, completely forget about the left-hand side of the table.
On the right-hand table, go down the column headed “v or d” till you find your d-value; the correction you want will be listed beside it. There are three
columns covering different ranges of d-values. The sun’s correction will always be somewhere in the first column, since the d-value of the sun can never be
bigger than 1.0’. The columns are headed “v or d” because we will use this same table later on to get a v-correction using a v-value.
There is an example worked out in Figure 3.2-9. Follow it through to see where each of the numbers comes from. For more practice looking up and
correcting the sun’s declination, you can work through the following practice exercises. The tables you need are in the Table Selections.
Figure 3.2-10 The three cases for figuring Lat from the sun’s declination (Dec) and the zenith distance (z). This applies to northern or southern hemisphere (just flip the pictures over). The
only thing that matters is the name ( N or S) of the Lat and Dec. Same name means both are on the same side of the equator; contrary means on opposite sides.
For Contrary-Name cases you will always subtract declination from zenith distance to get latitude (Figure 3.2-10). Look at this example: you find the
zenith distance = 42°, you know you are in the northern hemisphere (your DR-Lat is N), and the declination of the sun is 20° S. You are north; the sun is
south. At noon the sun is due south of you by 42°. The sun is at 20° S, so you are 42° N of 20° S. In other words, you are at 22° N latitude—20° from the
sun up to the equator plus your latitude of 22° N = 42°. For Contrary-Name cases you always subtract declination from zenith distance to get latitude.
These rules are summarized in Figure 3.2-11.
Figure 3.2-11 Rules for figuring LAN Lat from DR-Lat, declination, and zenith distance.
(A) DR position at noon on July 25th, 1978 was 44° 10’ N, 131° 00’ W. A series of noon sights were taken and Hs-max was found to be 65° 22.5’ for a Lower Limb sight taken at
20h 50m UTC. The index error was 2.0’ on the scale, and the height of eye was 9 feet. Find latitude at LAN.
(B) DR position at noon on Mar. 28th, 1981 was 16° 40’ S, 146° 30’ W. A series of noon sights were taken and Hs-max was found to be 69° 44.2’ for a Lower Limb sight taken at
21h 51m UTC. The index error was 2.5’ off the scale, and the height of eye was 12 feet. Find latitude at LAN.
(C) DR position at noon on Oct. 25th, 1978 was 34° 29’ N, 025° 00’ E. A series of noon sights were taken and Hs-max was found to be 43° 11.7’ for a Lower Limb sight taken at
10h 04m UTC. The index error was 1.5’ off the scale, and the height of eye was 14 feet. Find latitude at LAN.
Figure 3.2-13 Left. Three worked LAN sights. Right. Work Form 107 for finding latitude at LAN. Example (A) is presented in the work form. Blank copies of these forms are in the Appendix.
Many navigators find these useful at first, but then carry on later without them. The process used here for converting Hs to Ho will be used with every sight you do from now on, sun, moon,
stars or planets. We will also be looking up the declination of each body, so your experience here will be reinforced throughout the remainder of the course.
where the use of ( ) here means we now care about the sign (±) of each term. North latitudes and declinations are positive numbers, and southern values
are negative. The sign (±) of z is determined by the direction of the noon sun. If you looked north to the noon sun, then z is positive; if you looked south, z
is negative. The parentheses are used in the equation to emphasize that each term must be inserted with the proper algebraic sign (±). If your answer is
positive you are north of the equator; if negative, you are south of the equator. With the sign rules given, this equation will work in all circumstances.
Specifically, it will work when you are sailing near the equator, but don’t know if you are north or south of it at the time of the sights. Standard textbook
rules for LAN latitude listed earlier are ambiguous in this circumstance.
Once you find out what side of the equator you are on, later sights can generally revert back to using the Easy LAN Rule if your DR is kept up to date.
To expand, let’s first look at validity of the Easy LAN Rule of first adding, then if necessary subtracting z and Dec. The Easy Rule will work whenever
the difference between adding and subtracting is much larger than the uncertainty in your DR-Latitude. The difference between adding and subtracting will
be either (2 × declination) or (2 × zenith distance), depending on your latitude and the time of the year. If the uncertainty in your DR-Lat is 4° or less—
which it certainly should be since 4° = 240 miles—then the Easy Rule only has trouble whenever either the sun’s Dec or z is less than 2°.
The sun’s Dec is less than 2° for about a week either side of each equinox, for a total of about 4 weeks a year. The zenith distance, z, will be less than
2° whenever your DR-Lat is within 2° of the sun’s declination. But in this latter case, the midday sun will be too high for a routine noon sight anyway so it
doesn’t count—very high sights can be done, but they are difficult, because with the sun near over head, you do not know which way to look to rock the
sextant. In short, the Easy Rule will work from all locations, even straddling the equator if your DR is good, at all times but the equinoxes. Summary: use
the Easy Rule, but record somewhere this rule using the direction of the sun to pull out for possible use when crossing the equator with poor DR—or just
wait a day till your DR puts you safely on one side or the other.
The LAN latitude sight has two primary attractions: the sextant sights are easy (usually) and it only takes a few minutes to find your latitude once you
have the maximum sextant height in hand. This latter attraction, however, goes away very quickly if it takes an hour to do the sights themselves—
especially in lower latitude where it can be extremely hot at midday. To protect the attraction, you must know when to start the sights so you don’t waste
time waiting for the sun to peak out.
Furthermore, the longer you take, the heavier the sextant becomes, and a heavy sextant is not an accurate sextant. One tends to accept less than the very
best sextant alignment of sun and horizon when your arm is throbbing with pain—hold a half-gallon of milk (the weight of a heavy sextant) in front of you
for 20 seconds to get the point. So for accuracy and efficiency one should predict the starting time of the sights as close as possible.
To predict the time of LAN we need two numbers from the Nautical Almanac (mer pass sun and arc to time) and our DR-Lon at midday. The efficiency
of the sight depends on the accuracy of our LAN time prediction, and the accuracy of our time prediction depends on the accuracy of our DR-Lon.
The Nautical Almanac tells us the time of LAN in a roundabout way. It tells us the UTC of LAN at Greenwich, and provides a table for us to correct
this time for our particular longitude. The listed time is officially called the local mean time of meridian passage, but its meaning is important, not its name
—one can navigate quite happily without the concept of local mean time beyond how we use it in this book. Indeed, if you want to see that cel nav can
actually be funny, look up the official definition of local mean time in Bowditch... then quickly forget that experience and stick to our definition of what the
times in the NA mean.
You might guess that the UTC of the sun’s meridian passage (LAN) at Greenwich would always be at 12:00, or some other constant time, because the
earth rotates daily on its axis beneath the sun at a very constant rate. But this is not the case; the situation is not quite so simple—the earth’s rotation axis is
tilted and the tilted, rotating earth is in annual motion around the sun in an orbit that is not a pure circle; it is an ellipse. As a result, the UTC that the sun
crosses the Greenwich meridian oscillates back and forth, from one side of 12:00 to the other (11:44 to 12:14) throughout the year as was shown back in
Figure 3.2-4.
Once you have this predicted time of LAN, set a digital alarm to go off 10 to 15 minutes earlier. When it goes off, unpack the sextant and start the
sights. Take sights till the sextant height begins to drop, pack up the sextant, and figure your latitude.
If the sextant height is already dropping when you start taking your sights—the worst case from an LAN point of view, since you missed it—or it keeps
going up well beyond the time you predicted for the peak, then, quite simply, there has been a mistake somewhere. You either copied the wrong number
from the Nautical Almanac, or your arithmetic was wrong, or your DR-Lon was wrong. If you missed it, that’s it; no LAN today—the process called
Reduction to the Meridian designed to cover such cases is best left buried in Bowditch. As we learn in the next chapter, we still will get a perfectly good
LOP from these sights, it just won’t be parallel to the bottom of the chart when we plot it.
...In Depth
11.9 Longitude from LAN
Latitude from the peak height of the sun at noon is a routine and reliable technique. Finding longitude from the observed time of this peak height is possible in an emergency, but
should not be considered a routine method. Here we show the technique and precautions that must be taken...
You might ask at this point “How accurate must my DR-Lon be to avoid missing LAN?” The answer is in the Arc to Time Table. The sun moves west
at 15° of longitude each hour. Divide both by 60 to see that this is the same as 15’ of longitude each minute of time. If my DR-Lon is wrong by 15’, my
time prediction will be wrong by 1 minute; if my DR-Lon is wrong by 1°, my time prediction will be off by 4 minutes. If I start 12 minutes early—which is
conservative—my DR-Lon could be off by 3° or so and I should still catch LAN. A 3° longitude uncertainty corresponds to about 180 miles in the tropics
or about 120 miles at 48° North. Rule of thumb: heading south from here, if you are confident you know your DR position to within 100 miles or so, you
can start taking your LAN sights 15 minutes before your predicted LAN time and you won’t miss it.
As for the magnitude of that level of uncertainty, think of a city 100 nmi from where you are now, and ask what you would have to do and for how long
to not know which of these cities you were in.
Another, less obvious question might be “Do I want to bother with these sights at all?” The answer is: Yes, probably—at least at first. The sights are
easy, they are good practice, and a good confidence builder. Headed straight south, down the coast they even tell you something of interest, how far south
you are. But once the confidence is there, and once you head out, diagonally, across an ocean, the value and attraction of LAN sights fades rapidly.
The key point is the end result—your latitude. In the middle of the ocean, knowing the precise latitude line you are on is rarely more valuable than any
other LOP; it just happens to be parallel to the bottom of your plotting sheet. You still don’t know where you are, you only know you are somewhere along
that LOP. To fix your position you need a second LOP to intersect with the first one. And the fix you get from two intersecting LOPs is just as accurate if
they are both tilted. In short there is no virtue to having one of them be a latitude line.
And there is a notable disadvantage. You must take the LAN sights at a specific time of day, and very often at sea this is not convenient. You may well
want to sleep at this specific time, or you may have to tend to the boat at this time, or you may want to eat at this time, or whatever... the sun could be
behind a cloud at this time. Furthermore, no matter how well you predict the time and how fast you take the sights and do the paperwork, you can rarely
complete the entire process faster than you can take and reduce a normal set of three or four sun lines (Chapter 5). You can take these anytime you please.
Even worse, if you do your sight reductions by a mobile app or computer program—not what we are learning at the moment—there is no virtue at all to
the noon sight. Noon sights have gained notoriety because you can find something from the sun (i.e., your latitude) without learning how to do the rest of
cel nav. If that is all you wanted, this would be as far as you needed to go in the training. But that is frankly negligent, and deprives you from learning the
great joys and power of the full knowledge of the subject
4.1 Introduction
At this point, after finishing LAN work, with all its numbers and table look ups, we take a break from that type of study and just use our hands for some
plotting practice. We will be doing what is actually the last step of a cel nav fix—plotting the lines of position (LOPs). At this stage you will not know
where the data came from (we learn that in the next chapter); this is being treated as a pure plotting exercise, done in this order specifically to take a break
from the number crunching.
We will cover basic plotting tools and procedures as well as the special types of plotting sheets used in open ocean navigation. We also introduce DR
plotting from typical logbook entries.
After this plotting practice, we move on to sun lines (more table work) in Chapter 5, and after that take another break with more plotting in Chapter 6.
At that point, we are essentially done, meaning the density of new information is much reduced and we start applying what we have learned so far, with
simple extensions to the other bodies.
(2) Next, draw a horizontal line on the longitude diagram in the bottom right-hand corner at the position of your mid-latitude. This line is then the
longitude scale you will use for reading and plotting the longitudes of points on the chart.
(3) Label the central vertical line with your mid-longitude. And now we draw in the other longitude lines, which is the main job in setting up these
sheets.
(4) On the outside scale on the central compass rose, to the right of the mid-longitude line, go up from the mid-latitude line (0 on the curved scale) to
your mid-latitude along the curved scale. If your mid-latitude is 42° N, go up 42°. Mark a point at this spot. Then go down from the center latitude line and
mark another point in the same way. Draw a line between the two points to get the longitude line. You can do the same thing to the left of the center line to
get another longitude line, but in this case the outer scale is not labeled, so you must just count off the degrees.
(5) Label the new longitude lines, remembering that west of Greenwich longitude increases to the west, or left. The chart is now set up and ready to go.
Each sextant sight gives us one line on our chart (the plotting sheet). That sight and its sight reduction tell us we are located somewhere on that line.
The line is called a Line of Position because we know we are on the line somewhere, but we don’t know anything more about our position from that one
sight. To find our actual position we need a second LOP from another sight. Our position is then the intersection of the two lines, since that is the only
place that is on both of the lines at the same time.
Our task now is to see how the four numbers in Box 6 are used to plot this line on the chart. To do the plotting exercises you will need:
• Pencil (number 2 lead is recommended),
• Eraser (pencil type is recommended),
• Universal plotting sheets,
• Dividers (speed bow type is recommended),
• Nav protractor (5” or larger is recommended),
• Parallel rulers (15” clear is recommended),
Figure 4.4-2 Using a square protractor to draw LOPs. Any protractor that has a full 360º can be used for this application; the larger the better. Or you can plot using parallel rulers and the
compass rose on the plotting sheets.
Figure 4.4-3 The LOP plotting procedure, Part 1 (Section 4.4)
Figure 4.4-4 The LOP plotting procedure, Part 2 (Section 4.4)
...In Depth
11.10 Ocean Plotting Sheets
The standard universal sheets discussed here meet most needs underway, but there are options, that are outlined here, including pdf versions that could be convenient for practice...
Question: What do the a, Zn, a-Lat, a-Lon stand for in the above exercises?
Answer: We do not know yet! Treat this as a pure graphic exercise, and just follow the plotting instructions. It will all make sense in the next chapter.
Figure 4.5-1 Example plotting problem (A) in Exercise 4.6
(3) This one is a 125-mile run with two course changes. Last fix was at log reading = 600.0 and your position there was 26° 00’ N, 44° 00’ W. From this
position you sailed off on course 325 T and changed course twice before you did your sights. Find your position at log reading 725.0. In your log book this
leg might be recorded as:
(4) This one is a 131-mile run with four course changes. Last fix was at log reading = 558.0 and your position there was 26° 00’ N, 46° 00’ W. From this
position you sailed off on course 135 T but were gradually headed off to the south. You finally tacked at log = 662 to course 080, and while on this course
you did your sights. What was your position at log reading 689.0? In your log book this leg might be recorded as:
(5) This one is a 111-mile run with three course changes. Last fix was at log reading = 666.0 and your position there was 24° 00’ N, 46° 00’ W. From this
position you sailed off on course 115 T and, as in (4), were gradually headed to the south before you tacked. Find your position at log reading 777.0. In
your log book this leg might be recorded as:
4.7 More DR Plotting Practice
This exercise can be postponed till later, but if you would like more practice now on the important skill of DR plotting and wish to see a sample in actual
use during an ocean passage, there is a segment of a logbook and the plotted DR track in Section 11.11 on Ocean Dead Reckoning. You can treat that as an
exercise and plot this out on your own to see if you get the same positions recorded in the logbook. There is also a record of the DR errors at each fix.
...In Depth
11.11 Ocean Dead Reckoning
In one sense, the most important goal of cel nav is to check our DR, because that might be all we have to go by. This note covers the procedures of good DR and how to use cel nav to
monitor our progress with it.
Figure 4.6-1 Plots of DR plotting practice of Section 4.6. Numerical Lat and Lon of final positions are in the Answers.
5.1 Introduction
We start with a discussion of sunrise and twilight, then move on to the main task of doing the full sight reduction of the sun for sun sights taken any time
during the day—not just at noon as we did in Chapter 3. In the classroom course we say “roll up your sleeves and get an extra handful of M&Ms,” after
tonight’s class it is all downhill. That is, once we learn the full process for sun sights at any time of day, the other bodies can all be added with just a note or
two on the distinctions. You will also see that much of what we do with these we have learned in the LAN procedure.
We use the Starpath work forms, which will guide you through the process in a step-by-step manner. The forms themselves will then serve as
instructions reminding you of the next step in the process.
Again, this is the main content of the course. After the sun lines are mastered, we can explain all the other bodies in half a page or so each. For the most
part, the other bodies use the identical procedure; we just select the needed data from different columns in the tables.
...In Depth
11.12 Practice with Time Prediction
The procedure for predicting sunrise, sunset, and twilight times is the same as given in Section 3.2 for LAN. We include a few practice exercises here...
The times of sunrise and sunset (as well as moonrise and moonset) are listed in the Nautical Almanac. The times are listed by date and latitude. The
times are given in local mean times, which as noted in the LAN time discussion of Chapter 3, we can interpret as the UTC of the event, observed from
Greenwich (Lon = 0). To figure the UTC of sunset for your longitude you must add to the tabulated times your West longitude converted to time with the
Arc to Time table. In east longitudes, you subtract your longitude from the tabulated times. Once you have the UTC of the event, you can convert it back to
watch time using the zone description of the watch. For more discussion of timekeeping, see Section 11.5 and for practice making numerical predictions,
see Section 11.12.
In common usage twilight is the time period between sunset and darkness (or darkness and sunrise). For the purposes of navigation, twilight is defined
more precisely. There are two twilight times, civil twilight and nautical twilight. These names refer to precise times, not time periods. Civil twilight is the
time the sun is about 6° below the horizon. For reference, the sun is 6° above the horizon when it is about 12 sun widths above the horizon, which will be
about 3 finger widths as you hold your arm out stretched in front of you.
At civil twilight under normal atmospheric conditions it is typically dark enough to see the brightest stars. This is the motivation for defining it as it is.
This is the time celestial navigators can start their star sights.
Nautical twilight is meant to be the dividing time between darkness and light. It is defined as the time the sun is about 12° below the horizon. At
nautical twilight, under normal atmospheric conditions, it is typically too dark to see the horizon. Again the definition comes from celestial navigation—if
you can’t see the horizon you can’t do star sights with a conventional sextant.
These times are illustrated in Figure 5.2-1 for the evening case. In the evening the time sequence is: sunset, civil twilight, then nautical twilight. In the
morning, however, the sequence is reversed. From darkness you first see the horizon at nautical twilight, the stars fade at civil twilight, then the sun comes
up at sunrise—the moment of sunrise is when the upper limb first appears on the horizon.
Celestial star sights are typically done between civil and nautical twilight—evening sights begin at civil and end at nautical twilight; morning sights
begin at nautical and end at civil twilight. The bright planets Venus and Jupiter, however, can typically be seen with the naked eye—or at least through the
small telescope of a sextant—during the brightest part of twilight when the sun is just below the horizon. The horizon is sharpest then, so these planet
sights are best reserved for this period. The accuracy of sextant sights is often determined by the sharpness of the horizon.
For celestial sights, we must predict the times of twilight as accurately as possible, but for inland navigation we only need an estimate of the length of
twilight—to let us know, for example, when we won’t be able to see land.
The times and length of twilight are given in the Nautical Almanac, but not in the Tide Tables, where you can find sunrise and sunset times. Figure 5.2-
2 shows how twilight times and lengths vary with latitude and date—the times are relative to sunrise or sunset. This much information should be adequate
for applications inland. For example, in mid-June at 48° North, you will first see stars—if we might use this as a measure of darkness—about 45 minutes
after sunset, and in another 66 minutes or so from then, it will be too dark to see unlit land. In short, you have some 111 minutes, or about 2 hours of usable
twilight after sunset for visual navigation. Near either equinox (mid-September or mid-March), on the other hand, you would only have about an hour of
light without the sun at this latitude.
Figure 5.2-2 Twilight related time intervals for various latitudes and dates
Note that in the tropics, latitudes less than 23.45°, these times do not change much throughout the year. And at any latitude, the length of twilight is
shortest at the equinoxes, even though the days are shortest on the winter solstice. And a final note on the rules of the nautical road, versus the rules of the
roads we drive on: by law, your boat lights must go on at sunset; but your car lights must go on at civil twilight. In both cases, however, it is not illegal to
run your lights over longer periods, or even always.
Figure 5.3-1 Starpath work forms Box 1, includes the sight data and data from the logbook.
WT - is the Watch Time of the sight—the time you read directly from your watch when the sight was taken, without any corrections applied.
date - is the date of the sight according to the watch used for WT.
body - is the celestial body that was sighted. In this example it is the sun. Remember to indicate upper or lower limb for sun and moon sights. You can
use symbols here. The standard symbol for a lower limb sun sight is an underlined circle with a dot in the center.
Hs - is the angular sextant height of the sun exactly as you read it from the sextant. Using a good metal sextant, this number should be read and
recorded accurate to the tenth of a minute. With plastic sextants, the precision will not be as dependable or even achievable, but we do the best we can.
WE - is the Watch Error. Determine the Watch Error from WWV radio broadcasts, GPS, or your chronometer logbook. WE will increase daily
throughout your voyage, but the rate of increase will rarely be more than about 10 to 15 seconds a month for quartz watches. If, for example, the watch is
10 seconds slow on the day of your sight, the WE is 10s and you must add this error; if the watch is fast you subtract WE.
DR-Lat - is your dead reckoning latitude. This should be your best estimate of your latitude at the time of the sight. Figure it from the DR plot of your
course changes since your last fix.
Log - is your log (odometer) reading at the time of the sight. We need this if we are to advance this sun line to a later sun line or LAN latitude line for a
running fix. Record your log reading before and after your sight session, and from these you can figure the approximate log reading for each of the
individual sights taken during that session.
IC - is the Index Correction of your sextant, which you must measure at each sight. The correction is (+) when the index mark is off the scale when the
horizon is aligned; it is (-) when the index correction is on the scale. The form reminds you of this; or use the jingle “When it’s on, take it off.”
ZD - is the Zone Description (time zone) of the watch. This is the number of hours you must add to the Watch Time to get UTC. Remember it is the ZD
of the watch we need here, not the ZD of the time zone we happen to be in at the time of the sight. We could be in time zone +9 with our watch set to time
zone +7. You find the ZD of the watch from WWV broadcasts. If your watch reads 13:40:05 when WWV says the time is 20:40:00, then your ZD is +7 and
your WE is 5s fast.
DR-Lon - is your dead reckoning longitude—the longitude of your DR position at the time of the sight.
HE - is the Height of your Eye in feet at the time of the sight. In practice this will be the same for all sights.
Add WT, WE, and ZD to get UTC. Use the extra space provided to adjust minutes and seconds to less than 60 if necessary. If the result is greater than
24h, subtract 24h and increase the date by 1 day. If the result is negative—which is only possible when your watch is set on an east-longitude (negative)
time zone—then add 24h and decrease the date by 1 day.
Record the proper UTC and date in the large space provided.
UTC date / LOP label - is a large space provided for recording the UTC and the label you wish to use for this sight. With this label prominent it is
easy to find a particular sight if we must leaf through a series of them at a later time.
Figure 5.3-2 Starpath work forms Box 2, in which we will enter data from the daily pages of the Nautical Almanac. We use the UTC we figured below Box 1. Box 2, together with the results
of Box 3, tell us where the body was over the earth at the time of the sight—its geographical position (GP).
Figure 5.3-3 Fill in Box 2 from daily Nautical Almanac pages. The data enters the form in the same order as presented in the NA.
Under the column headed SUN, go down the list of UTCs to the hour of the sight. (Recall the NA uses the abbreviation UT for UTC, Section 11.5.)
You will find two numbers listed to the right of this hour; one is the GHA of the sun and beside it is the declination of the sun. Check the top of the column
to see which is which. Record these in the spaces provided in Box 2.
GHA-hr - is the Greenwich Hour Angle of the sun at the exact hour of the UTC of the sight. If, for example, the UTC of the sight is 13h 48m 13s,
record in this space the GHA of the sun at 13h.
v/moon/planets - is not used for sun lines, only moon and planet lines.
Dec-hr - is the declination of the sun at the exact UTC hour of your sight. It is listed beside the GHA in the NA. Remember to record the label (name)
of the declination, i.e., North or South—it is usually recorded preceding the number as N 20° 15.2’ to distinguish it from a latitude that has the label at the
end.
Now look to the bottom of the sun column in the NA to find the “d-value,” and record it in the space provided in Box 2. Label the d-value (+) if the
declination is increasing with time or (-) if the declination is decreasing. This procedure is the exactly the same as we did finding the declination of the sun
for LAN sights.
d - is the declination d-value. It is the hourly change in the declination, listed at the bottom of the sun column on the NA daily pages. Remember to
record the sign of d, + or -.
HP-moon - is not used for sun lines, only moon lines.
You are now done with the daily pages of the Nautical Almanac.
SHA or v-corr - are not used for sun lines. SHA is used for star sights; v-corr is used for moon and planet sights.
Turn to the Increments and Corrections pages at the back of the NA (or our Table Selections). There is one table for each minute of the hour. Pick the
one corresponding to the minutes part of the UTC of the sight, i.e., if the UTC is 13h 48m 13s, turn to the table labeled 48 min.
There are two tables on each page of the NA (48 min and 49 min, for example). Each table is divided into two parts (left part and right part) separated
by a vertical double line. The GHA correction is taken from the left part of the table; the declination correction is from the table on the right side. Please
note this distinction clearly; it can be a source of error when first learning these tables.
GHA-m,s - is the increase in the GHA for the minutes and seconds part of the UTC. To find this correction, go to the left-hand part of the table to the
column headed SUN, then go down the column until you are opposite the seconds part of your UTC. The seconds are listed on the far left. Record this
value in the space provided. This correction is always positive.
d-corr - is the change in the declination during the minutes and seconds part of the UTC. For the sun this correction is always small (1’ or less). The
size of the d-correction depends on the d-value that is recorded in Box 2. Find the d-correction just as you did for LAN sights on the right-hand side of the
table. Go down the column headed “v or d” till you reach the value of d; the correction is listed beside it. Note that there are three “v or d” columns for
different values of v or d. For the sun you will always use the first one because the maximum value of d for the sun is 1.0’. (The columns are headed “v or
d” because for moon and planet sights we will use this same table for a v-correction.)
Recall that the d-corr does not depend on seconds, only on the d-value. Do not be confused by the seconds column along the far left side of the table.
These seconds are only used for the GHA corr.
Record the d-correction in the space provided and give it the same sign (±) as the d-value in Box 2. In other words, if d is (+) the d-correction is added;
if d is (-) the correction is subtracted. This step is the same as was done in LAN sights.
Add d-corr to Dec-hr just above it to get the declination, and record it in the space provided. And then, for future convenience, record the degrees part
of the corrected declination in the space labeled Dec-deg in the center of Box 4—together with a big N or S for north or south declination. Likewise, record
the minutes part of the declination in the space labeled “Dec-min” near the center of Box 5.
Add GHA-m,s to GHA-hr to get GHA and record it in the space provided. Adjust the minutes part of GHA to be less than 60, if necessary, using the
extra space provided. (It does not matter for now if the degrees part of GHA is greater than 360; we will correct this later if necessary.)
GHA - is the Greenwich Hour Angle of the sun at the time of the sight. It comes from the sum of GHA-hr and GHA-m,s.
Dec - is the corrected declination of the sun at the time of the sight. It comes from Dec-hr corrected by d-corr.
You now know exactly where the GP of the sun was at the time of the sight. The GHA corresponds to the longitude of the GP; the declination is the
latitude of the GP.
Referring to the example, at 22h 50m 08s on October 25th, 1978, the GP of the sun was at declination S 12° 13.7’ and GHA 166° 30.7’. A person
standing at latitude 12° 13.7’ S and longitude 166° 30.7 W would have observed the sun precisely overhead at that moment.
Figure 5.3-5 Step 4, choosing an assumed position. The bottom is just a graphic reminder of the definition of same name and contrary name.
The name “assumed position” might be misleading. We are not in any way assuming we are at that position. It is an artifact we use to facilitate the use
of the tables. Later we will come back to discuss the background to this method of sight reduction.
a-Lat - is the assumed latitude. To find the assumed latitude, simply round off your DR latitude (recorded in Box 1) to the nearest whole degree. For
example, if your DR-Lat is 35° 20’ N, the a-Lat should be 35° N. If the DR-Lat is 35° 40’ N, choose 36° N for the a-Lat. If the minutes part of DR-Lat
happen to be exactly 30’ it doesn’t matter if you round up or down to get a-Lat. Record the assumed latitude in Box 4, with a big N or S—also record this
same number in Box 6 for later use.
a-Lon - is the assumed longitude. The space for this is just below the GHA. Choosing the assumed longitude requires a little more thought than
choosing the assumed latitude, but not much more. (The logic behind why we do this step the way we do will be clear shortly.)
We choose the minutes part of a-Lon first and then the degrees part. Look at your DR-Lon recorded in Box 1 and the GHA recorded just below Box 3.
If your DR-Lon is West, choose the minutes part of a-Lon equal to the minutes part of the GHA of the sun.
The degrees part of the assumed longitude will be the same as those of the DR-Lon, or, at most, they will differ by 1º. The task here is to choose the
degrees part of a-Lon so that a-Lon differs from your DR-Lon by at most 30’. For example, if the GHA of the sun is 200° 10’ and your DR-Lon is 135° 15’
W, the proper choice of a-Lon would be 135° 10’ W; but if your DR-Lon were 135° 45’ W, the proper choice would be 136° 10’ W. The W. Lon rule is:
Choose a-Lon within 30’ of DR-Lon with the same minutes as the GHA.
If your DR-Lon is east, the rule is slightly different. For east longitudes still choose a-Lon within 30’ of your DR-Lon, but choose the minutes part of a-
Lon equal to 60’ - (the minutes part of the GHA). For example, if the GHA is 200° 10’ and your DR-Lon is 75° 45’ E, choose a-Lon equal to 75° 50’ E, but
if your DR-Lon is 75° 15’ E, the proper choice of a-Lon is 74° 50’. The E. Lon rule is: Choose a-Lon within 30’ of DR-Lon with a-Lon minutes equal (60 -
GHA minutes).
Record a-Lon in the space provided below GHA, and also record it in Box 6 for future use.
LHA - is the Local Hour Angle. To find the local hour angle (LHA), you will either add or subtract a-Lon and GHA. If a-Lon is West, subtract a-Lon
from GHA to get the LHA. If a-Lon is East, add a-Lon to GHA to get LHA. The form reminds you of this difference with a “-W,+E.”
Record the LHA in the space provided below a-Lon. If LHA is greater than 360° subtract 360° using the extra space provided. If LHA is negative, add
360°. The corrected value of LHA should be a whole number of degrees (the minutes should cancel if we chose a-Lon correctly), and it should be a positive
number less than 360°. Record the corrected value of LHA in Box 4.
(The next tables we use have LHA only listed as whole degrees, so that is why we chose a-Lon the way we did.)
Box 4 now contains all the information you need to use the Sight Reduction Tables (Pub. 249, Pub. 229, or any other version).
In the next step we need to know if a-Lat and Dec have the same labels, both North or both South (called Same Name) or whether one is North and the
other South (called Contrary Name). You can tell this at a glance from Box 4.
...In Depth
11.13 Practice Choosing the AP
Because this step is sometimes elusive on the first pass through it, we include here more practice and another way of explaining the process...
Turn to the appropriate volume and page of Pub. 249 (we have several in the Tables Selections). Each page is labeled with an assumed latitude; find the
pages labeled with the a-Lat recorded in Box 4. There is no distinction between north and south latitudes in these tables. Each of these pages is further
labeled with a range of declinations (0° to 14° or 15° to 29°) and a name, Same Name or Contrary Name. Find the page that includes the Dec and Name
given in Box 4. In each case there should be two pages that meet these conditions, but only one of them will include the LHA of Box 4.
After finding the proper page, go down the appropriate Dec column till you are opposite the appropriate LHA listed to the left or right of each page.
You find three numbers listed there; copy these into Box 5. (Figure 5.3-6).
Figure 5.3-6 Fill in Box 5 using Pub. 249 Sight Reduction Tables.
In all cases, the d-corr increases at most 1’ with each 1’ increase in the Dec-min. Therefore this interpolation is done by just using the same tenths we
have in the Dec-min for the d-corr. In some cases, the next correction will be the same as the previous one. In this case, there are no tenths to the correction.
An example of this is seen when d-value = 54 and Dec-min = 4 or 5. In both cases the correction is 4. You can see a few other cases like this in Table 5, but
most corrections are 1’ apart. (There is extra practice on this step in Section 11.14.)
Record the d-correction in the space provided below Box 5, and then add it or subtract it to “tab Hc” to get the final value of Hc. The sign (+ or -) of the
correction is the same as that of the d-value.
Note that Pub. 249 lists numbers accurate only to the minute; they do not use tenths of minutes. When you look up your d-correction, just round off
Dec(‘) to the nearest whole minute.
Hc - is the corrected value of the calculated height of the body—also called calculated altitude.
This finishes the Hc part of the sight reduction. We turn now to correcting Hs to get Ho. This is Step 7, which is identical to that which you have done
in the LAN latitude sights.
What you have left to do are the IC, dip, and altitude corrections just as you did with LAN sights. Refer to those instructions for a more detailed
explanation.
Look up the dip correction in the front cover of the NA and record it in the space provided. The size of the dip correction depends only on HE; the sign
of the correction is always (-).
Add IC and Dip to Hs to get Ha, the apparent altitude, and record it in the space provided.
Dip - is the dip correction.
Ha - is the apparent altitude (apparent height).
altitude correction, all sights - is the altitude correction to Ha that applies to all sights. It includes refraction, semidiameter, and so on.
Look up the altitude correction for the sun on the front cover of the NA. The altitude correction of the sun depends on the month, the size of Ha, and on
whether the sight was upper or lower limb. Note that there are two altitude correction tables for the sun. One is for Ha less than 10° and the other is for Ha
greater than 10°.
Add the altitude correction to Ha to get Ho, the observed altitude, and record it in the space provided.
Ho - is the observed height of the sun. Note that all of Step 7 is the same as we did for LAN sights.
With just this one LOP, we know only two things. We are somewhere on this LOP, and we know that our present DR position for log 5808 is not right. If the LOP had crossed right through
our DR position, then we also know that our DR might be right. But one LOP only does not assure that.
If we are lucky, and happen to be at the closest possible place on the LOP, then we are only off by 3 or 4 miles. The closest place on the LOP to the DR (drop a perpendicular from DR to
LOP) is called by some the “estimated position,” but this is not a very useful concept defined this way. It is more wishful thinking than practical use. If this vessel had been sailing to weather
in a fresh easterly, for example, you are almost certainly downwind of your DR position, which would put you on the other side of the DR track.
In this course we reserve the term estimated position (EP) to be equivalent to a DR position that has been determined using all knowledge available short of a measurement of any kind.
This other EP.(closest point on an LOP to the corresponding DR) is based on a measurement,i.e., the one LOP, but sailing in the ocean this is not a useful concept, and it is indeed wrong in
some circumstances, as in the example cited.
(1) Set up a universal plotting sheet centered near your AP. Plot a point at your AP (a-Lat, a-Lon).
(2) Draw a line through this point in the true direction of Zn. We will call this line the azimuth line.
(3) Put a mark on the azimuth line at a distance of “a” nautical miles from the AP, where “a” is the a-value in Box 6 expressed in minutes of arc. Mark
the azimuth line in the direction toward Zn, when “a” is labeled Toward; go the opposite direction along the azimuth line when “a” is labeled Away.
Remember that nautical miles are measured along the latitude scale: 1’ of latitude = 1 nmi.
...In Depth
11.14 Practice with Pub. 249 Vol. 2, 3
For practice with these last two steps (finding Hc and Zn), we have here a few more examples and practice exercises on going from Box 4 to Box 5 and 6...
(4) Finally, draw a line perpendicular to the azimuth line passing through the point just marked. This line is your Line of Position. This sight and sight
reduction have told you that you are located somewhere on this line. Label the line with the name of the celestial body, your log reading, and the UTC.
— DONE! —
That is the full sight reduction process for sun sights—how to go from a timed sextant height of the sun to an LOP on your chart.
To follow are four exercises for practice, followed by the opportunity to work through the original LAN sights from Chapter 3 as normal sun lines. All
the answers are provided. Do not hesitate to check your work as you proceed to save time.
Sights #2 and #3 are completely independent of each other (we only practice the paperwork with these), but you can plot the fix from sun #4 and #5,
which were taken from the same (dead in the water) position, several hours apart. The answer to that is shown in Figure 5.3-10. In the next chapter we see
how to correct these LOPs when we are moving. It takes us back to more chart work.
Figure 5.3-10 Plotting a fix between morning and afternoon sun lines (#4 and #5). In this case there is no motion of the boat between sights.
The main task now is to learn the procedure for filling out the form, and noting whenever possible how the form itself reminds you what to do next.
Again, after you have mastered the actual practice of finding a fix, we will come back and look more into the mathematical principles behind the
process, or if you are more comfortable knowing the background before getting into these practical matters, skim through the In Depth topics of Chapter 11
to see several related articles.
...In Depth
11.24 Optimizing Celestial Fixes
This section has details of more interest toward the end of the course, but see the short subsection on checking assumed positions when plotting LOPs for a fix, which answers the
question, “Are the a-values too large?”
CHAPTER 6
RUNNING FIXES
6.1 Introduction
We often say in class that the transition from prudent skipper to navigator takes place with the mastering of the running fix. Most basic navigation prior to
that involves finding a fix from two separate objects, whereas the running fix lets you find a fix from a single object. We can also do the same by finding
distance off and a bearing, but those piloting methods are not as universally applicable as is the running fix.
The technique is not so often learned because it is not so often needed on inland waters, but when it is needed, you need a navigator. Now in the age of
GPS, it is even less needed, and such skills are almost doomed in the eyes of many skippers. On the other hand, when it is needed now, the need for a
navigator is even more pronounced.
One of the benefits of learning celestial navigation is the necessity of learning the running fix. Although it is rare to need a running fix in sight of land,
it is a crucial daily chore of routine celestial navigation.
In this chapter, we discuss the process and then offer practice problems, starting with the simplest and leading up to a specially constructed set of
exercises that can be used to master sun line navigation in all hemispheres.
For anyone behind in the sun line sight reduction processes from Chapter 5, however, we recommend that you complete some of the sun line sight
reduction exercises before starting these plotting exercises.
Running-fix Procedure
(1) Take a magnetic bearing to the light and plot the LOP on the chart labeled with the log reading and watch time of the sight.
(2) Hold a steady course and speed until the magnetic bearing to the light has changed by at least 30°, preferably more. Smaller bearing changes give
weaker fixes, but there is little to be gained by waiting beyond a bearing change of 60°. With a log available to count miles run, it is not necessary to keep a
constant boat speed.
(3) Take a second magnetic bearing to the light and plot this LOP, labeled with the second watch time and second log reading. Subtract the two log
readings to find the distance run between sights; without a log, figure the distance run from average speed and time between sights.
(4) Starting from any point A on the first LOP, draw a line in the direction sailed between sights and mark off the distance run between sights along that
line. Then use parallel rules to advance the first LOP to the point B, which marks the distance run between sights. Label the advanced LOP with both log
readings (or times) joined by an arrow. Your position at the time of the second LOP is the place where the advanced LOP crosses the second LOP.
Advancing an LOP means moving it without rotating it. This can be achieved with parallel rules or a roller plotter.
A running fix is as accurate as a conventional bearing fix from near-simultaneous bearings to two separated objects provided the DR between the two
sights of the running fix is accurate. This requires a calibrated log or knotmeter, a corrected compass, and careful records between sights. It also requires
that you know the currents present—so far we have assumed they do not exist. Leeway should also be included when sailing to windward in very strong or
very light air–also not added yet.
On coastal waters, the object of the sights must be close enough that its bearing changes significantly in a reasonable time. If the object is too far away,
or too near the bow or stern, the time required to see a bearing change between sights will be so long that small uncertainties in the DR will accumulate and
the accuracy of the fix will suffer. As a rule of thumb, consider that the uncertainty in the final running fix will be slightly larger than the uncertainty in the
DR between sights.
How to compensate for current and leeway in a running fix is discussed in detail in our textbook Inland and Coastal Navigation, but here is an
overview. Start the DR plot from point A, but now plot a corrected DR track between the two sight times. In other words, assume that point A was your DR
position at the time of the first sight, plot your best guess of where you should have been at the time of the second sight taking into account current and
leeway, and then advance the first LOP to that point, as shown in Figure 6.2-2.
Figure 6.2-2 A running fix corrected for current. This is the same situation shown in Figure 6.2-1, but now in a northerly current of 2 kts. The time between sights was 30 minutes, so point B
must be advanced 1 mile (2 kts × 0.5h) to B’ in the direction of the current set. The new DR track runs parallel to the A to B’ line (course made good) to account for the current set in
subsequent dead reckoning—if we assume the current will be the same then.
The same procedure is used for running fixes between two sun lines, although in this application the time between sights is likely to be longer (1 to 4
hours) and consequently it is likely that there will be course changes between sights. In any event, the method is the same as when correcting for current.
Forget where your actual DR position is, choose any point A on the first sun line and assume that it is your DR position at that time. From point A, DR to
the time of the second sight, and advance the first sun line to that point, as shown in Figure 6.2-2. In other words, when you advance an LOP, you simply
move it exactly as you think your boat moved between sights.
It is possible to sail many miles on inshore waters and never need a running fix, but if you sail long enough in varied conditions, eventually you will run
across a situation where a running fix is the only way to find out where you are. A navigator should be prepared for all conditions, so practice with running
fixes is fundamental to good navigation preparation. For ocean sailing, it is mandatory.
Figure 6.2-3 Correcting DR for leeway and current. Same as regular plot, but rotate each course leg downwind by the leeway angle on each leg, then off set the result (D to E) with the net
drift during the full run time (A to D).
Then correct for the current set at the end of the plot by moving the final position by the amount set during the time of the run. In this example, the line
DE is the net drift that we move in the direction of the set. If T is the total time in decimal hours from A to D and Sc is the current speed in kts, then this
total drift in nmi DE = T × Sc.
This analysis makes these two assumptions: (1) The wind speed and direction are constant over the plot and we are on the same point of sail on each leg
(else the leeway changes), and (2) the set and drift of the current are constant over the region of the plot. For more details and nuances of DR in various
conditions, see Inland and Coastal Navigation (Starpath Publications, 2014).
The half-circles on the DR track are the DR positions at the log readings indicated. Note that the 556 DR position does not fall on the 556 LAN line.
This means the DR is wrong—your DR will always accumulate error with time, which is the reason we need celestial fixes.
After the LAN sight, the boat sailed on and later that afternoon took a regular sun line sight. The LOP from this sight, labeled sun line #3, is plotted in
the regular way using the data given in Box 6. The log read 605 at the time of this sight, so the line is labeled accordingly.
The DR position of the boat at log 605 is also shown on the DR track. This point is 49 miles (605-556) up the track from the 556 position. (Remember
the miles scale is always the latitude scale.)
The task now is to advance the 556 line to the 605 line to take into account your motion between sights, and in this way find both latitude and
longitude. Note that the angle between the 556 line and the 605 line is greater than 30°, meaning the bearing of the sun had changed sufficiently. The angle
between successive sun lines equals the change in the sun’s bearing, and for a good fix this angle should be 30° or greater.
To do the chart work, mark off 49 miles on the DR track starting at the point where the 556 LAN line crosses the DR track. Then use parallel rulers to
move the 556 line up the DR track to this point, and re-draw the advanced 556 line. The advanced line is labeled 556 —> 605.
Your position at log 605 is then the intersection of the advanced line with the 605 sun line. At this point you abandon your old DR track and start a new
one.
It is also good practice to record in your logbook how far and in what direction your DR was off. In this example, the boat had sailed off its DR by 24
miles in direction 053. The significance of this error depends on the time of the last fix. If the last fix was 1 day and 100 miles earlier, this error is not so
large. In 24 hours this amounts to an effective current of 1 kt. It could also be accounted for in this 1-day run of 100 miles by a smaller, more typical,
current of 0.5 kts (a 12-mile error) together with a combined error in both sun lines of about 3 miles, an average helmsmanship error of 3° (a 5-mile error),
a leeway of 3° (a 5-mile error), and a log error of 5% (another 5-mile error).
These errors add up to about 30 miles. If these errors were unrelated to each other, it would be statistically very unlikely that they would all be in the
same direction. The net error would be less than 30 miles. However, sailing to weather in strong winds and big seas these errors of navigation are not
unrelated; they do, in fact, tend to be in the same direction. Figure 6.3-2 shows how you can extend this process when you have courses changes between
sights.
Figure 6.3-2 A running fix between two sun lines corrected for course changes between sights. The total distance run between sights was 22.5 miles with three course changes, so we have
to figure the course made good to do the advancement. Sometimes you can read the course and distance made good between sights from the ongoing DR plot, but It is often best to
construct a special DR plot as shown. Then we advance from A to B as if that is what we sailed. In other words, we always advance along the course made good between sights (dotted
line). This plot could then be corrected for current as shown in Figure 6.2-2.
Figure 6.4-1 Running fix between sun line and LAN, from Ex. 6.4 (1).
(2) Morning sun line at log 414: AP(30° N, 144° 20’ W); Zn = 146°; a = 3’ T. Afternoon sun line at log 450: AP(29° N, 144° 39’ W); Zn = 190°; a =
10’ A. Your course between sights was 200 T. What is your position at log 450?
(3) Early afternoon sun line at log 863: AP(30° N, 145° 50’ W); Zn = 212°; a = 18’ T. Later afternoon sun line at log 878: AP(30° N, 146° 23’ W); Zn
= 274; a = 13’ T. Your course between sights was 320 T. What is your position at log 878?
(4) First sun line at log 955: AP(31° N, 145° 08’ W); Zn = 113°; a = 7’ T. Second sun line at log 983: AP(31° N, 145° 48’ W); Zn = 164°; a = 12’ A.
The course between sights was 310° T. What is your position at log 983?
The Exercise
On October 27th, 1978 you are sailing on course 195 True at a speed of 8.0 kts. Your DR position at 0630 WT is 45° 53’ N, 131° 24’ W, at which time
the log read 596.0 miles. You desire to find an afternoon position by sun alone using a running fix. The running fix will be between two sun lines, one at
mid morning and the other just after midday. Your course and speed remain constant throughout the day. For this problem: HE = 10 ft., IC = 1.8’ on the
scale, ZD = +8h and WE = 6s Fast (i.e., UTC = WT + 8h - 6s).
Between 0945 and 0955 WT, you take a series of five sun lines a minute or two apart. After analyzing them in a method we cover later, you decide the
following is the best representative of a sun line at that time: Hs = 21° 18.3’ LL at WT 09h 51m 20s. The corresponding log reading was 622.8.
You carry on until 1300 and then take another series of sun lines and decide that the best average for this set of sights was: Hs = 31° 10.4’ LL at WT
13h 06m 55s, with a corresponding log reading of 648.9.
Find your position at 1307 WT by doing a running fix between the two sun lines. Try this first on your own without checking details of the solution.
The answer is on the plot following the completed work forms. We call the first Sun #6 and the second Sun #7.
Procedure
(1) Set up a plotting sheet; plot the 0630 position; lay out the course; and find the DR positions for 0951 and 1307 WT by marking off the course DR
track with the logged runs. (Take a peek at the solution work forms in the Answers section to check your answers, as it will cost much in time if these are
off to begin with.)
(2) Do the sight reductions of the two sun lines and then plot them. (Again, check the solutions before going on.)
(3) Figure the distance run between sights by subtracting log readings (26.1 miles), and then advance the first line to the second by this amount in
direction 195 T. The advanced line should cross the 1307 line at the position marked on the answer plot.
Filled-out forms and plots for the intersection fix are in the Answers section.
...In Depth
11.15 AM to PM Running Fixes
In the old days when navigators relied on celestial navigation they spent more time on optimizing the procedures. From an old text, we adopt this method of getting the most accurate
running fix in the shortest amount of time...
Figure 6.6-1 A worked example of the type of problem given in Exercise 6.6. There are details for each step given in the Answers for each one.
Procedure
STEP (1). Set up a universal plotting sheet centered near the given DR position. Remember, in south latitudes that latitude increases down the page,
opposite to the printed scale. Also double-check that you have eastern longitudes increasing toward the east, to the right, and so forth. If this is done wrong
to begin with, much time is lost in the practice.
Plot the given initial position and lay off the given course from that point. Double check it. Using the speed and WTs given, figure the distance run
from the given position to each of the other three WTs. Using dividers lay off these distances to mark the three DR positions. The proper DR positions for
each line are given in the answers, so you can check yourself at this point if you like. At the end of STEP (1) you should have a course line drawn across
your plotting sheet with four DR positions marked on it (the initial position and then the positions at each of the sights. Label these positions with the
appropriate WTs).
STEP (2). We will do the last LOP first, which can save time in this practice exercise because we know the answers. Normally you would plot first
sights first. Now do the sight reduction for the last sight and plot this LOP: Look at the last DR position and compare it with the given GHA of the sun to
pick your Assumed Longitude, and from these figure the LHA. Then round off the DR-Lat to the nearest whole degree for the Assumed Latitude. With
LHA, Dec (given), and Lat, go to the special section of Sight Reduction Tables (T-23, Tables Selections) to find Hc, d, and Z. Convert Z to Zn (remember
there are different rules for N and S latitudes), correct Hc for the d-correction, and then figure the a-value by comparing Hc with the Ho that is given. Plot
the LOP neatly and carefully, and label it with its WT.
STEP (3). To save time on your practice, you might crib a bit here and check that the answer does lie along this last LOP. Since we want position at the
last WT, the answer must be along this line, we just don’t know where until we advance an earlier line. (Of course you won’t have this luxury in the ocean).
If your LOP does not go through the answer, then the LOP or plotting is wrong and we might as well stop here to look for the problem. The proper a-Lat
and a-Lon are listed in the answers to check that stage.
STEP (4). Now do the sight reduction for the first or second line just as you did for the last one. Then plot it and advance it to get the running fix. For
more practice you can reduce, plot, and advance both of the earlier lines. They should give the same answer.
The problems in Exercise 6.6 require careful plotting, so a quick look to the answers might help at each stage to be sure you are advancing the correct
amount. Again, start with just first and third sights, and then add the middle one if you want still more practice.
...In Depth
11.16 An Ocean-going Nav Station
Sometimes where we do our work and the tools we use are crucial to the work we do. Here we list a few conclusions we have come to about these matters...
...In Depth
11.17 Offshore Navigation Checklist
Sailors are renown for having a list of lists as the departure approaches, so looking ahead here are a few things to consider for the nav station...
(1) DR position at 0900 WT, Aug. 12, 1982 was 21° 56.4' N, 124° 10.4' W. Course 250° T, Speed 13 kts. Find 1425 position from the three sun lines listed.
(2) DR position at 0840 WT, Dec. 22, 1982 was 28° 24.2' N, 06° 18.2' W. Course 120° T, Speed 9 kts. Find 1420 position from the 3 sun lines listed.
(3) DR position at 0800 WT, July 13, 1982 was 28° 14.1' N, 135° 37.3’E. Course 190° T, Speed 11 kts. Find 1646 position from the 3 sun lines listed.
(4) DR position at 0815 WT, July 12, 1982 was 20° 05.8' S, 32° 13.0' W. Course 220° T, Speed 10 kts. Find 1404 position from the 3 sun lines listed.
(5) DR position at 0815 WT, Mar. 30, 1982 was 29° 46.7' S, 36° 25.9' E. Course 295° T, Speed 12 kts. Find 1455 position from the 3 sun lines listed.
6.7 New Terminology
running fix
advanced LOP
retired LOP
leeway
CHAPTER 7
STAR SIGHTS
7.1 Introduction
The true power of celestial navigation for position fixing comes with the use of the stars. Sun sights are often considered easier, in the sense that they can
be taken anytime of day, and the sun is usually perceived as easier to find in the sky than is some specific star in its background of myriads—but these are,
for the most part, uninformed biases.
The disadvantage of the sun is that it gives only one LOP, and after completing the running fix some time later, the accuracy of the final fix is limited
by the accuracy of the DR between the two sights. In actual practice, the total time devoted to getting a fix from star sights will be shorter than from sun
sights, and the star results will be more accurate.
Also, as we shall see, when done right, it is actually easier and usually faster to set up the sextant for a particular star sight and have it ready to be
measured than it is to get the sun set up in the sextant with the proper shades in place. The special preparation needed for the star sights takes just minutes.
The process is called precomputing star sights. We postpone this process till Chapter 10 on Star Identification purely so we can complete the learning of
sight reductions for all bodies first—while we are warmed up and in the process of mastering these procedures.
The main goal of this chapter is just to learn and practice the sight reduction of stars, but before leaving the chapter, please review Sections 1.2 and 1.3
on the overall picture of taking a star sight, along with Section 5.2 on twilight times—we usually take star sights between nautical and civil twilight.
The most basic star sight, in a sense, is a sight of Polaris, the North Star. A sight of this special star, which is essentially on our meridian at all times, is
analogous to the LAN sight of the sun on our meridian. The full sight reduction collapses to the adding and subtracting of a few numbers. Latitude by
Polaris alone is covered at end of this chapter, as it is a special case.
The Star Finder Book includes much information on star motions, colors, terminology, names, etc. along with notes on preparing the sights. If questions
arise about terminology or star motions, please refer to Section 3.1 of that book along with the Glossary of this one.
New terms used for specifying star locations are Aries (♈), which is the “Greenwich meridian” of a star globe, and sidereal hour angle (SHA), which is
the longitude of a star on the star globe relative to Aries, as shown in Figure 7.7-1.
Figure 7.1-1 Star coordinates. Aries is a specific line through the stars that serves as the Greenwich meridian of the sky. The almanac tells where it is relative to Greenwich at all times. The
Sidereal Hour Angle (SHA) is the longitude of the star relative to Aries. It is a permanent property of the star, just as its declination is. GHA of Aries is how far Aries is west of Greenwich;
The SHA of a star is how far it is west of Aries. Thus the GHA of star, which is how far it is west of Greenwich, is just the GHA of Aries plus the SHA of the star. Coordinates relative to us
are called Local. The Local Hour Angle (LHA) of Aries is how far Aries is west of us. The LHA of the star is how far the star is west of us.
The process of preparing for star sights and the general subject of star and planet identification is presented in Chapter 10, along with the option to use
Pub. 249 Vol. 1 for selected stars. Here we are sticking with Vols. 2 and 3, which cover stars with declinations less than 29º. Other options will be clear
shortly.
Figure 7.2-1 Section of a star sight reduction. Except for this special way of getting the GHA of a star, all the rest of the sight reduction is the same. There are also no declination
corrections for stars. The LOP plotting is also the same.
...In Depth
11.20 Star and Planet Brightness
Notes on the complex system used to specify brightness and tables to make it easier...
Finding Latitude
(1) The first step in the short sight reduction of Polaris sights is the same as it is for any sight; we convert Hs, the sextant height, to Ho, the observed
height. This is done the same way for all sights: Ha = Hs ± IC - Dip, and then Ho = Ha - altitude correction.
As noted earlier, the only difference between sun and stars at this stage is the table we get the altitude correction from. For stars this correction (which
is only a refraction correction) is listed next to the sun’s altitude correction table on the inside of the front cover of the Nautical Almanac (T-8 in the Table
Selections).
(2) Once we have Ho of Polaris, we must make several small corrections to it to take into account the motion of Polaris around the true north pole of
the sky. Start by converting the WT of the sight to UTC by removing the Watch Error and adding the Zone Description of the watch.
(3) Following a sample in Figure 7.8-1, turn to the proper Daily Page of the Nautical Almanac (T-1 through T-6) and look up the GHA of Aries at the
hour of the sight. Then turn to the Increments and Corrections pages (T-9 through T-12) to find the minutes and seconds part of the GHA of Aries. Add this
correction to the hours part to get the GHA of Aries at the time of the sight.
Figure 7.8-1 Section of a work form used to figure LHA Aries and the observed height of Polaris, along with related pages from the Nautical Almanac.
(4) Now find the LHA of Aries, which is as before, when sailing in western longitudes the GHA of Aries minus your DR-Lon (West). In eastern
longitudes you find the LHA by adding your DR-Lon (East) to the GHA of Aries. Then round off the LHA to the nearest whole degree. If the result is
greater than 360°, subtract 360°, and if the result is negative, add 360°.
Aries is the Greenwich Meridian of the sky. In this step we are finding how far west of us this reference line lies. When we know this we know which
part of the sky is overhead, and from this the tables can tell us where Polaris is on its daily trip around the pole.
(5) Now turn to the Polaris Tables at the back of the Nautical Almanac (Table T-22). Here we will find three corrections; the largest depends on LHA
Aries, the two smaller ones depend on the month of the sight and the DR-Lat. Note that at the bottom of the Polaris corrections pages in the Nautical
Almanac they give full instructions for finding latitude from Polaris. After a little practice, those will probably be the only instructions you need for this
process.
Latitude = Ho - 1° + a0 + a1 + a2
Note that in the Polaris instructions the Almanac calls Ho the “Apparent altitude (corrected for refraction).” They know this is the same as Ho, and they
know that nowhere in the Almanac is the altitude correction of a star called a refraction correction, but they do this nevertheless. They do things like this to
help support navigation schools.
Here is an example that is worked out on the next several pages. You can follow the time conversions and Hs to Ho corrections using the work form, as
shown. Sample tables show where the corrections come from.
Starting with this information:
WT = 18h 50m 30s, WE = 25s Fast, ZD = +9h
Date = 24 October 1978
Hs Polaris = 29° 15.5’
IC = 2’ on, HE = 9 ft
DR-Lat = 29° 5’ N DR-Lon = 148° 30’ W
Figure 7.8-2 Top shows instructions and example from the Nautical Almanac on how to do Latitude by Polaris. Left column shows the required tables from the almanac, with the values
marked for the example given in the almanac at the top of the page. On the right are the corresponding tables marked for the example we use in this text from previous few pages. Notice in
the almanac example, they interpolated for the 10’ of LHA, and used a0= 30.8’ and not just the 30.7’ for 162° 00’. In our example we do the same, interpolating for the 12.4’ of LHA Aries,
namely: 59.9 - (12.4/60) x (59.9 - 59.0) = 59.7’.
Notice that when finding the a0 correction (Figure 7.8-2) there can sometimes be a notable difference between successive whole degrees of LHA. As a
first step we just rounded LHA off as we have done for all sights so far, but in this case if you do notice a large difference you might keep the minutes part
of the LHA and then interpolate for a0. In rare cases this could improve your result by up to 0.4’.
(1) Hs = 29° 15.5’, UTC = 03h 50m 05s, October 25th, 1978
DR position is 29° 05’ N, 148° 30’ W. Latitude = ?
(2) Hs = 25° 02.0’, UTC = 03h 49m 20s, July 24th, 1978
DR position is 25° 00’ N, 60° 13’ W. Latitude = ?
(3) Hs = 42° 31.2’, UTC = 20h 04m 10s, July 25th, 1978
DR position is 42° 40’ N, 30° 10’ E. Latitude = ?
(4) Hs = 44° 55.6’, UTC = 05h 04m 00s, July 26th, 1978
DR position is 45° 28’ N, 126° 30’ W. Latitude = ?
(5) Are the latitudes you get North or South, and why?
...In Depth
11.18 Checking a Sextant with Stars
We have many ways to check the index correction of a sextant, but that is just an offset; it does not tell us if the actual angles being measured are correct. This note—definitely in the
special topics category—tells how we can check the reading by measuring the diagonal angle between two stars...
...In Depth
11.19 Artificial Horizons
Usually if we have any water at all near by we get the best sextant practice using the Dip Short method. With no convenient water nearby, we can always take sights using an artificial
horizon from any location. This note explains the procedure and some options...
CHAPTER 8
PLANET SIGHTS
8.1 Introduction
There are five planets visible to the naked eye that might be used for navigation: Mercury, Mars, Venus, Jupiter, and Saturn. Of these, only Mercury is not
cataloged in the Nautical Almanac for use in celestial navigation. This is because it is so close to the sun that it can only be seen rarely and then just before
sunrise or after sunset and its altitude will always be very low. As a rule, one tries to avoid sights below some 10°, because refraction uncertainties are
largest at low angles. The appearances of Mercury throughout the year are discussed in the Almanac so we do not confuse it with Venus or a bright star.
Of the four other planets, only Venus and Jupiter are special, because of their exceptional brightness. If either of these is in the sky, it will be brighter
than any of the stars. Mars does periodically go through periods of being very bright, but as a rule, Mars and Saturn are just there to confuse us as bright or
medium bright stars sitting at places where no star should be. If well positioned and adequately bright, they can be combined with stars for routine sights,
but they have no special significance other than that. The Planet Diagram (Figure 8.1-1) is a quick way to estimate what planets are in view.
Figure 8.1-1 A sample Planet Diagram from the Nautical Almanac, to which we have added sun rise and set times. Mer pass of stars can be estimated from the SHA lines shown. On
February 1, Venus is 3h behind the sun, so it will be well to the east (left) of the sunset. At the end of March it passes behind the sun and emerges as a morning star. At 40 N we see Mars
is visible most of the night, throughout the year. More generally, any body crossing the meridian near midnight will be visible all night during that day. Shaded areas means bodies too close
to the sun to see. We would see Mercury as an evening star in September. A study of this diagram with a 2102D Star Finder in hand is a good way to learn what all it tells us. The planet
curves change each year. Always check the Planet Diagram notes in a new Almanac.
Venus and Jupiter, on the other hand, can often be used to extend the sight taking time periods because they can be seen almost immediately after
sunset in the evening, before the other stars appear, or taken last in the morning after the stars begin to fade.
...In Depth
11.22 Great Circle Sailing
Though we may not often follow a great circle route under sail, the heading toward this shortest way to go is sometimes of value to our planning. The solutions follow from standard cel
nav procedures, though always best done by direct computation...
...In Depth
11.23 Rhumb-line Sailing
Generally we solve this problem by just drawing a line on a Mercator chart, but the task of actually computing the heading and the precise rhumb-line distance is more involved than a
simple great circle route. Here we explain the standard tables that solve this for us...
In Step (2), Box 2, after finding the hours part of the GHA of the planets on the Daily Pages, you must also record one extra number on the work form
that we did not use for the sun, namely the v-value. For each planet this is listed on the Daily Pages at the bottom of the planet’s column. For planets we do
not use the space marked HP-moon, so you can draw a line through this space.
We use the v-value in Step (3) to find a small correction to the GHA of the planet. This extra correction is needed for the moon and planets to take into
account their motion relative to the earth as we all circle the sun. The relative motion of the moon and planets causes their GPs to circle the earth at slightly
different rates throughout the year. The size of “v” tells us how much their present rate varies from the average rate tabulated on the Daily Pages.
The d-value for the moon and planets means the same thing it does for the sun; it tells us how much their declination changes each hour. We also look
up the d-correction to the declination in the same way as for the sun. The only difference here is the d-values, and hence d-corrections for moon and planets
can be much larger than they are for the sun. Again, the reason for this is the relative motions of the earth, moon, and planets, which causes their
declinations to change at a faster rate in some cases.
In Step (3), Box 3, the v-correction goes in the space marked “SHA or v-correction.” Cross out SHA, which is used only for stars, and look up the v-
correction on the Increments and Corrections Pages of the Nautical Almanac. The v-correction is found in the table labeled with the minutes part of the
UTC of the sight—the same table you use for the d-correction, and the procedure for using the table is the same. This is why the columns in this table are
headed “v or d.”
Note that the v-correction, with one occasional exception, is always positive, so it must be added to the GHA. The occasional exception is Venus, and
only Venus, which can have a negative v-correction. If this case applies, the v-value of Venus is tabulated on the Daily Pages as a negative number. To
summarize: the v-correction is added unless the v-value is listed as negative, and only Venus can have a negative v-value.
The GHA of the planet is found by adding the v-correction to the hours and minutes part of the GHA.
The final difference in the sight reduction comes when finding the altitude correction to Ha. The altitude correction for planets is in the same table used
for the altitude corrections of stars (T-8). All planets get their main altitude correction from this table. This correction for stars and planets is always
negative.
For MARS or VENUS sights there is occasionally one further correction that you also find in the altitude correction tables. This correction is always
small and always positive; the size of the correction depends on Ha and the season. This correction is primarily a parallax correction needed occasionally
because these two planets, our nearest neighbors, are much closer to the earth than the stars, sun, and outer planets. (This correction is larger for the moon,
since it is even closer.)
This parallax correction goes in the work form space marked “additional altitude correction,” below Ha. The names “moon,” “Mars”, and “Venus” are
printed in this space to remind you that this correction applies only to these sights.
Now to find Ho, apply the altitude correction and the additional altitude correction to Ha. The rest of the sight reduction of planets is the same as for the
sun.
...In Depth
11.21 Compass Checks at Sea
In modern times we may not be often called upon to rely on celestial navigation, but it is almost certain that at some point we will need to check a compass at sea, and our knowledge
of cel nav makes this an easy operation...
9.1 Introduction
The moon is a mixed blessing in celestial navigation because when it is very prominent in the night sky, its glare on the water can distort the horizon below
it. Crescent moons, however, can be an asset in some circumstances.
The moon is most useful in routine navigation for daylight fixes with the sun, which can be done periodically throughout the month, as explained in
Section 9.10. For now, the task is how to do the sight reductions, which is the same regardless of the phase of the moon. You will soon note that our work
forms make doing moon sights as easy as any other sight, despite the fact that the moon has a few extra steps to its sight reduction.
In the Emergency Navigation book, we show the real power of the moon—its ability to tell us UTC if we happen to lose that crucial component of
celestial navigation. The moon is the only body in the sky that moves relative to the stars fast enough to tell time from its position. The procedures for
extracting that data from moon sights, however, is not at all routine and takes special instruction and resources.
We first get right to the sight reduction process, which is the last body to cover, and following that there is discussion of how to optimize the use of the
moon in daily procedures.
In Step (3), Box 3, find the v-correction to the GHA in the Increments and Corrections pages. The procedure is exactly the same as it is with planet
sights.
The altitude corrections for the moon are listed in a special table on the back inside cover of the Nautical Almanac. There are two tables–one for Ha in
the range of 0° to 35°, and one for 35° to 90°. These are Tables T-13 and T-14 in the Tables Selections.
We find both the regular altitude correction and the additional altitude correction in this table. The altitude correction depends on Ha. Go across the top
of the table to the correct range of Ha, and then down the column to the degrees part of Ha, and then farther on down till you are opposite the minutes part
of Ha, which are listed at the sides of the table. The correction you find there is called the altitude correction; record it in the corresponding space on the
work form.
Now to find the additional altitude correction: stay in the same column and continue on down to the bottom part of the table, and stop when you are
opposite the value of HP recorded in Box 2. At that location in the table there are two corrections; one is for upper limb sights (U), the other is for lower
limb sights (L). Choose the appropriate one and record it in the space marked “additional altitude correction.” Both altitude corrections are always positive
for the moon.
If the moon sight is of the upper limb, enter a -30’ in the space marked “upper limb moon.” For lower limb sights we just ignore this space on the work
form. This step is simply a trick the almanac does that allows the other two corrections to always be positive. For upper limb sights you always subtract 30’
regardless of the size of Ha.
To get Ho, add to Ha all corrections listed below it. For lower limb sights, these are the altitude correction and the additional altitude correction; and for
upper limb, it is these two and an additional -30’.
The rest of the moon’s sight reduction is the same as any other sight reduction. The d-value for the moon is listed every hour, but we use it the same
way we do for sun and planet sights. Select the sign of d (±) the same as with the sun or planets by noting if the declination is increasing (+) or decreasing
(-) with time. Don’t make the mistake of using the d-value itself for this. The d-value can go up with time when the declination is going down, and vice
versa.
Form sections that are different for the moon are shown in Figure 9.2-2, i.e., only Boxes 2 and 3.
Figure 9.2-2 Differences between Moon and other sights, Moon #1. Box 2 data and the additional altitude correction is the main difference.
Figure 9.2-3 shows two more examples of the altitude correction for the moon, and after that there are two exercises on just this step. Following that is
a chance to work though this first example from beginning to end on your own (called Moon#1), which can be checked underway using the example given.
Then we work several more moon sights and discuss the role of the moon and planets in daily work.
Figure 9.2-3 Examples converting Moon Hs to Ho. There is practice on this step on the next page. Samples 1 & 2 altitude corrections for the moon are on T-13 and T-14
The accuracy of twilight sextant sights is typically determined by the sharpness of the horizon. If the horizon is a sharp line we get good sights because
we know precisely where to align the stars in the sextant. When the horizon is obscure, with the sky blending almost imperceptibly into the sea, we must
resort to our best judgment when aligning the star with the horizon—and this will vary from person to person, and from one star to another for the same
person looking in different directions.
Evening sights start with a good horizon and end with a poor one. The reverse is true for morning twilight sights: we start in the dark with a weak
horizon, which then slowly sharpens as daylight approaches. Any sights we can take during the brighter part of twilight, morning or evening, will improve
the accuracy of our fixes. The moon, Venus, and Jupiter are the three bodies that can be seen during the brightest part of twilight when the stars are not
visible.
Since we need a triangle of three well positioned bodies for a fix (Section 11.24), the standard procedure is to take Venus or Jupiter, or possibly the
moon and then pick the best stars available to complete the triangle. Most navigators would probably agree with this use of Venus or Jupiter, but all may
not extend this philosophy to the moon, because sights of a bright moon might not be as accurate as those of a well-positioned crescent moon or a planet—
the reason is the bright moon lights up the horizon below it, which effectively moves it closer to you, so your sights could end up too high.
...In Depth
11.24 Choosing Optimum Sights
The key to a good fix is starting with the right bodies and then evaluating the sights once taken. Here we review the basics that lead to an optimum fix using the fit-slope method...
Sometimes none of these bright bodies will be available, or the moon will be there but not in a usable phase or location. In that case we go by stars
alone, but even then it is productive to figure ahead of time the best three stars to use and precompute their heights and bearings. In the evening, this
procedure still gives you a good head start on the brighter stars before the horizon begins to fade; in the morning, it lets you postpone brighter stars till the
end of twilight when the horizon has improved.
In summary, if Venus or Jupiter is available it is good practice to use them. They are bright enough to spot by just looking around as you start your
voyage. To find out where they will be and when they might be useful for a later cruise, check the Nautical Almanac’s Planet Notes and Diagram. As a
general rule, Mars and Saturn offer no special aid to your sights, and they would only be chosen if they happen to be bright and make up the best triangle
with the available bright stars.
The usefulness of the moon cannot be specified precisely because it is difficult to make reliable generalizations about where the moon is. It simply
moves around too much in the sky, and as a result its location in your sky depends on where you are and when. But we can provide guidelines we have
found are valuable for getting started at more precise predictions. These guidelines are presented in Table 9.10-1. They are given according to the age of the
moon that is listed for each day on the daily pages of the Nautical Almanac.
Besides these guidelines you also have the moonrise and moonset times given in the Nautical Almanac. When considering moon sights, first check
Table 9.10-1, then double-check the moon’s rising and setting times to be sure the moon is above the horizon at the time you plan the sights. The meridian
passage time of the moon is also listed. Use the time of upper transit to tell when the moon will cross your meridian at its maximum height in the sky,
bearing either due north or due south depending on your latitude and the declination of the moon. All times listed in the Almanac have to be converted to
Watch Time, but for judging roughly where the moon is relative to the sun, recall that the tabulated mer. pass. time of the sun is midday, regardless of what
WT it translates to. If the moon’s tabulated meridian passage time is earlier than that listed for the sun, the moon is ahead of the sun, meaning to the west of
it. With practice, the rising, meridian passage, and setting times of the moon relative to the sun will give you a fairly good idea of the moon’s location.
Referring to Table 9.10-1, we see that the moon is typically best positioned for daytime sights with the sun during moon ages 6 to 8 and 21 to 23, or
about 1 week of each month. In practice, however, these sights might be available for longer periods, up to almost 2 weeks in some cases (ages 4 to 10 and
19 to 25), depending on your latitude and the moon’s declination. In some of these extended cases, however, the optimum sight times might be so close to
twilight that there is no virtue in the sun-moon fix when you have a star fix available within a couple of hours.
Table 9.10-1 also tells when you might combine the moon with star sights. Again, just use it as a guide and then make more specific choices from your
specific circumstances. It could be, for example, that the moon is indeed visible for evening twilight sights on the day (age) that the Table predicts, but for
your location and date it is too low for an accurate sight.
In some circumstances you can take star sights at night by a moonlit horizon. The accuracy will not be the best, but it is possible when you have a
bright moon that is fairly high in the sky. The trick is to pick the three optimum bodies (Section 11.24) and then hope that the errors will be about the same
in each of the sights. Any one sight will not be very accurate, but if the errors for each star are roughly the same your fix will be a good one. The errors are
more likely to be similar if the horizon is similar in all directions. Your three LOPs will make a fairly large triangle, but its center might be a reasonable fix.
The procedure is not recommended for routine usage.
Figure 9.10-2 is a reminder of how the moon moves eastward through the stars each night, as it progresses through the lunar cycle. The Emergency
Navigation book has an extended discussion of how the moon moves across the sky. That book emphasizes how to determine the direction of the moon
based on its phase and the time of night. It all ties in to a better understanding of what we see in the sky and how this helps us stay oriented.
Figure 9.10-2 Motion of the moon, eastward through the stars. The moon circles the earth (full moon to full moon) at a rate of about 12° per day relative to the fixed stars behind it
(360°/29.5 days). To see this, look at the moon relative to a prominent star at the same time on consecutive nights. Recall that the diameter of the full moon is about 0.5°, so 12° is 24 moon
diameters, about half a hand span. This graphic was created from the wonderful free program Stellarium (www.stellarium.org), with the exaggerated moon sketches added. We leave it as
an advanced exercise, but in principle you can find the Lat and Lon of the observer from this picture and a Nautical Almanac alone.
...In Depth
11.25 Star and Planet ID
We do not need to know how to identify stars by just looking at the sky if we do our homework properly, but when there is not time for that or, we are in an emergency without our
standard tools, then the more we know about star ID the better...
...In Depth
11.26 Emergency Procedures
Several methods of standard cel nav can be adapted to use with limited resources, and basic principles lead to even further backup methods. We review some of these here...
...In Depth
11.27 Pub. 249 Vol. 1, Selected Stars
The sun, moon, and all planets can be sight reduced with Pub. 249 Vols. 2 and 3, as well as stars with Dec less than 29º. Vol 1 is intended for sight reduction of other selected stars.
The procedure is different, but shorter, as explained in this note. You can also use Pub. 249 Vol. 1 to predict the best three stars to use...
This is the concept underlying the construction of star globes seen in astronomy displays or book stores periodically. It is a static projection of the stars
down onto the globe of the earth, although they don’t usually show the map of the earth, but rather just a blue background. All the relative positions of the
stars within the constellations are laid out on a sphere (Figure 10.1-2). Just imagine now that that sphere is a globe of the earth.
If you happened to be located at the GP of a star, you would observe that star precisely overhead at your zenith—the laser beam going right through the
top of your head. If you had a sextant, you would measure its height above the horizon as exactly 90°, (i.e., overhead). If you were not at the GP of a star,
that star would not appear overhead but rather off of your zenith, at a lower altitude in the sky. How much lower would depend on how far off you were
from it.
There is a direct and simple correlation, which we will prove a bit later on. If you move 1° away from the GP, the star will move down 1° from the
zenith—it will be 89° high in the sky. Move 10° away from the GP and the star will now be 80° high in the sky. We also clarify later that a distance of 1º of
latitude on the surface of the earth is equal to 60 nmi, but do not be distracted by these details at this point. The summary is all that matters: if you are at the
GP, the star is overhead; if you are away from the GP, the star is lower. As you move toward the GP, the star gets higher, until you are precisely at the GP,
at which point it is overhead on your zenith. And remember, too, our model: the earth is not rotating, so the sky is permanent.
If we happened to be about half way up Vancouver Island, BC, when we stopped the earth, then one star that might have stopped right overhead is
Alkaid, on the tip of the handle of the Big Dipper in Ursa Major. For everyone living in that region (Clayoquot Sound), Alkaid would be a zenith star,
overhead all night, every night of the year—let us simply forget for the moment that if we did stop the earth rotating it would be night all the time; that
detail does not concern us now.
Ursa Major itself would stretch all the way to Nunivak Island in the Bering Strait, with Dubhe (tip of the cup) just north of you (Figure 10.1-3 and 10.1-
4). And if that had been the case since the beginning of time (i.e., the earth never had rotated) then almost certainly, people in that region would have
described where they lived something like, “I live in the Land of Ursa Major, near Alkaid.” And this would be so because everyone could see an entire map
of the globe reflected in the sky. From Clayoquot Sound (Alkaid), I could see Nunivak (Dubhe). Furthermore, I would know how to get there. Just head
toward Dubhe.
Figure 10.1-3 Dipper as it might appear stopping in the sky over Alaska and British Columbia.
Figure 10.1-4 The Land of Ursa Major, in what we now call the Pacific Northwest.
Now imagine we are sitting in Clayoquot Sound (in the cold wet Pacific Northwest) and a sailing vessel comes in from the Pacific Ocean with the
report that they have just come from the Land of Arcturus, in the middle of the ocean. And they found there a paradise of white sand beaches, clear warm
water, palm trees, mahi mahi, hula hula, etc. And you would like to go there. Well, the navigation part is done. They have told you where it is, and you can
see it in the sky—follow the arc of the handle of the Big Dipper, away from the cup for a distance about equal to the breadth of the dipper to an isolated
(yellowish) bright star. That is Arcturus—sailors say “Arc to Arcturus” to remember how to find it from the Big Dipper.
Now sail off toward Arcturus. Each night as you get closer, it will be higher in the sky (Figure 10.1-5), and then when Hawaii is in sight, Arcturus will
be overhead. If you have a sextant, you can measure its height every 24 hours or so during the voyage to monitor your progress. If it is 2° higher today than
it was yesterday at this time, then you have made good 120 nmi.
Figure 10.1-5 With the earth not rotating, Arcturus would not move across the sky, it would just get higher as you got closer to it.
In short, if the earth did not rotate, there would be no such thing as celestial navigation—or at best it might be called “sky pilotage.” This concept of a
GP and how the height of a star in the sky depends on how far you are from its GP is the very basis of celestial navigation. These principles have been
known on various levels since ancient times.
But we have more to do to meet our practical goal because we know the earth does in fact rotate once a day. If we were to head off toward Arcturus in
the real world, we would be chasing a moving target all over the ocean, and we would not likely find our way to Hawaii.
We need to solve our real-world problem in two steps: latitude first, then longitude.
Latitude
We know the key to the latitude part, however, right from the beginning. Arcturus does indeed travel over the top of Hawaii. Unfortunately, it is not
locked overhead there, it just passes overhead in Hawaii once a day—over the southern tip of the Big Island. To understand why this is the key to latitude,
we must go back to our star globe and the laser beams.
Imagine our star globe fixed in space with all the laser beams lit up and penetrating the surface. The axis of the earth is pointed to the North Star,
Polaris. The North Pole is the GP of Polaris. The orientation of the axis is fixed in space and not moving. Now with the laser beams burning holes in the
earth, and the axis not moving, start rotating the earth to the east in your mind. You will see that the stars burn trails on the globe as the GPs move
westward, and these lines do not cross each other because the axis of the rotation is not moving. That is, as the earth rotates, any given laser beam does not
get any farther from the North Pole. And a line around the earth that is the same distance from the North Pole all the way around, is called a latitude line.
(Figure 10.1-6).
Figure 10.1-6 As the earth rotates to the east, the GPs of all the stars move westward around the globe, locked in on fixed latitudes called the declinations of the stars. They circle the globe
once every 24 hours.
In other words, every star in the sky is locked onto a specific latitude. Stars are on railroad tracks. They do not deviate. Once a day, the GP of a star
circles the earth on its own track, passing over every point on earth that has that latitude. This is another fundamental concept. Every star has a unique
latitude over which it circles the earth daily. The latitude of a star is called the star’s declination. (We should not confuse this term with the one land
lubbers use when they mean magnetic variation.) The declination of a star is the latitude of the star’s GP. To avoid confusion, we label the declination with
the N or S before the value and we label the latitude of a place with the N or S after the value. Thus, the latitude of the southern tip of the Big Island of
Hawaii is 19° 6’ N, whereas the declination of the star Arcturus is N 19° 6’.
Here now is the significance of this. No matter where I am on the globe, and no matter what time of year it is, or what time of night it is, if I see
Arcturus pass overhead, I know I am at latitude 19° 6’ N. In a real voyage at sea, however, I only get to make this evaluation once a night. The star will rise
in the east, move toward the south throughout the night as it rises, reach a peak height in the sky bearing due south as it crosses my meridian, and then
descend as it heads toward the western horizon.
Figure 10.1-7 In the real sky, above a rotating earth, the peak height of Arcturus at meridian passage will get higher every night as you proceed south toward latitude 19º N.
Figure 10.1-8 Schematic of a star rising, crossing the meridian at peak height bearing due south, and setting. The insert shows a section of the list of star declinations from the 2015
Nautical Almanac. The SHA listed beside it is equivalent to the longitude of a star on the star globe, but we do not get into that till later in the course.
We assume for now that the star we chose does indeed cross our meridian at night. If it does not, then we must choose another star to mark the latitude
we want. If we were sailing north from Tahiti (17º S) to Hawaii, we would see this star reach its peak height bearing north as it crossed our meridian.
So now, for the real world solution of sailing to Hawaii from Clayoquot Sound. First, I know my destination is at the latitude of Arcturus and that it is
in the middle of the ocean, well to the west of North America. Later when we learn the longitude part, we can make our route more efficient, but for now
we are going purely by latitude. So I first head due west for some miles to get safely offshore. I do not want to run into Cape Alava, WA, the most western
point of the continental US—or more specifically, Umatilla Reef, which is rather farther offshore than the Cape itself. Then I turn left, and head south.
Each night I watch Arcturus rise and cross my meridian. Early in the voyage it will be low in the sky at peak height, but as I proceed south, it will be
higher at peak height each night as my latitude decreases. Clayoquot Sound was at 49° 17’ N. I am headed toward 19° 6’ N, a distance south of 49 - 19 =
30º, and each degree is 60 nmi, so we must go some 1800 nmi to the south. This is not the shortest route to Hawaii! Eventually I will see Arcturus cross my
meridian directly overhead. I know then I am at the desired latitude, so I turn right and head west.
Now that I know I am at the right latitude, my job is to watch each night to see that I have not slipped north or south of where I want to be. If Arcturus
is not overhead any longer, but a bit north of my zenith, then I know I have slipped south and I correct my course to the north. And so on, until the islands
are in sight.
This is a long, roundabout way of getting places. It is called latitude or parallel sailing. It was indeed the way early explorers, including the Vikings, got
around the world, place to place. It is the only safe way to travel if you do not know how to find longitude.
A list of navigational star declinations is included on each daily page of the Nautical Almanac. There are another 100 or so stars listed in the back of the
almanac, along with several star maps that might help identify the stars relative to prominent configurations.
Recalling our original promise, here is how you might get from one place to another with this technique. Use the Nautical Almanac to look up a star
with declination near the latitude of where you want to go. You can identify the star using the star maps from the back of the almanac. Then sail to the
latitude of the star as described, making certain you know if you are well east or west of your destination. Once at the latitude, turn to your destination and
monitor your course each night.
Without a sextant, you will need some method to determine more or less precisely when a star passes overhead, but there are several tricks. We leave
those to the book Emergency Navigation; for now we just want to understand the principles. Other parts of that book explain how we would actually get to
Hawaii, but it never hurts to keep these principles in mind, and watch the stars ahead of you rise each night as you proceed south.
Longitude
When you travel north or south along the globe of the earth the stars change in unique ways, as we have just discussed. New stars are seen overhead,
new ones appear on the horizon, and so on. From any place on earth, I can always look at the sky and figure out my latitude. It does not matter what part of
the globe I am on, or what time of year I look at the sky, or what time of night I look at the sky. I do not need to know time to find my latitude.
Longitude, on the other hand, is a totally different matter because the stars are locked onto specific latitudes as we discussed earlier. Because the earth
rotates 360° around its axis once every 24 hours, the GPs of all the stars move west along the surface of the earth at a rate of 15° of longitude each hour
(360º/24 hours = 15º/hour). Looking up, when viewed from any specific latitude, the sky as a whole rotates westward at this same rate, 15° of longitude per
hour.
This means that the sky I see right now will look identical to the sky that is seen by someone at my same latitude, who is located 15° of longitude west
of me, 1 hour later. If I write down the heights and bearings of numerous stars and then call this person on the radio 1 hour later, he will measure precisely
the same heights and bearings for these stars. In other words, without knowing the time of night, I could not differentiate my longitude from his longitude
based on what we see in the sky. (Someone who is 15° of latitude south of me, on the other hand, will see a different sky no matter what time they look at
it.)
One way this is often summarized is to say, “You need time to find longitude.” But the relationship is stronger than that. Longitude and time are
completely equivalent in celestial navigation. If I know the correct time, I can find my longitude, and equally, if I know my longitude, I can find the correct
time. Longitude and time are essentially identical. Without pursuing the specifics for the moment, this is why we split the day into AM and PM and why
we split the circumference of the globe into West longitude and East longitude.
To clarify the relationship with a practical example, consider this situation. Suppose I have a watch, and from wherever I happen to be, I call up the
Greenwich Observatory in the UK, which is located precisely on the longitude 0° line, and ask them to help me with this illustration. I ask them to keep an
eye on the direction to the sun, and to please tell me when the sun bears precisely due south from their location. The sun will also be at its peak height in
their mid-day sky at this time, but for now I just need to know when it crosses due south at Greenwich. For now, I do not care how they do this—they could
have a tall rod and just watch when its shadow crosses over a thin line running north-south.
The moment they tell me the sun is due south, I set my watch to 12:00 and thank them. That is all I need to keep track of my own longitude for now.
This is, of course, just an example; we will have much easier ways to do this!
Now, to dramatize the point I want to make, I get into a box, and have this large box put into an airplane, and let it take off at high speeds to any place
in the world. The crew is testing me to see if I can indeed find longitude—and I must say, I don’t know where the box idea came from; the lecture has
always been presented this way, but a blindfold would be a more comfortable choice!
After many hours of travel, maybe circling back, the plane lands. I get out of the box and have no idea whatsoever (at least for the time being) where
we are. And someone asks, what is our longitude? Preparation for the answer depends on a couple of things. Will they tell me which way is south or north
right now or won’t they. If they tell me, then I can answer “Give me till noon,” presuming it is before noon wherever we are, or “Give me till the next
noon,” if noon is already past. I need to watch the sun cross the north-south line, our local meridian.
If they won’t tell me directions, then I have to wait one full day to use the sun or stars to find a precise N-S line, but that is easy, by various methods.
So let’s say it is before noon and I know a true north-south line. As I watch the sun, I note that it will be crossing north, rather low in the sky—which
means I must be fairly far into the Southern Hemisphere, but latitude is not the issue at hand. As the sun crosses the local meridian, I simply look at my
watch and it reads 16:00 (4 pm) (Figure 10.1-9 Top). And with that simple, single observation, I can make the statement that our longitude is 4 hours west
of Greenwich, which means our longitude is 4 hours × 15°/hour = 60° west of Greenwich. Recall that whenever we say our longitude is, for example, 120°
West, we always mean 120° west of the Greenwich meridian. We just usually omit the last phrase. It is like saying our latitude is 37° North, rather than 37°
north of the equator. The reference line is understood.
Figure 10.1-9 Top Meridian passage facing North.
Bottom Meridian passage found in the Nautical Almanac.
To review this reasoning: we know the sun crossed the Greenwich meridian at 12:00 according to this watch, and we know that all celestial bodies
move west around the globe at 15° of longitude per hour. You can think of the bodies moving across the sky at this rate, or think of their GPs moving along
the surface of the earth at this rate. It does not matter. The time we observed the meridian passage of the sun (a phrase we use often in cel nav) at the
unknown location was later than 12:00, so we had to be west of Greenwich. And from the time difference, we can compute the longitude difference. This is
an exact solution. If we know all the numbers precisely (i.e., the time the sun passed Greenwich and the time the sun passed us), we can figure out our
longitude precisely. That is always a true statement, not just part of the exercise we are working on now.
If we had observed the meridian passage at 03:00 (3 am) at our unknown position, then we would say: “the sun passes us at 03:00 and we know it is
heading west and will pass Greenwich at 12:00, so we must be 9 hours east of Greenwich, so our longitude must be 9 hours × 15º/hour = 135º East”.
In other words, once you know the right time, you can always find your longitude from the sun in this manner. In this example, we don’t really know
what time system or time zone we are using, but hopefully you see it does not matter. We only need to know what time the sun passed Greenwich
according to our watch. The method used here is obviously not very practical unless you have a satellite telephone, but that is not the point. It is the
principle we want to clarify.
We can make this a practical exercise that you can do immediately (i.e., at the end of this “1-hour course”, as promised) by cleaning up some details.
What do we need? We need to know the time the sun passed Greenwich and the time the sun passed us. The first we get from the Nautical Almanac, and
the second relies on a measurement of our own, and we need a watch set to the correct UTC (same as what used to be called GMT).
First you need to know what time the sun crossed the Greenwich meridian on the date you are observing it cross your own meridian. In other words,
this is not a constant time from day to day. It will always be within 16 minutes or so of 12:00 UTC, but you need to know it precisely. You get this daily
time of meridian passage at Greenwich from the Nautical Almanac. It is on each Daily Page as “Mer. Pass.” in the Sun box. In Figure 10.1-9 for day 7 of
the month selected, this time is 12:05 UTC, rounded to the nearest minute.
Next we need to determine when the sun crosses our meridian. If you had an unobscured view to both the east and west sea horizons, one easy way to
find the time of local noon is to time the sunrise and then sunset and take the average of the two (i.e., half way between them). That will be an accurate
time, if you have accurate rise and set times. Otherwise you could hold a credit card at arm’s length with the bottom edge aligned with the sea horizon and
time when the sun peaks over the card while rising and then when it drops below the card while setting, and take the average of those two times. With a
real sextant, we have even better ways.
The reason this is not a good routine method of finding longitude is that it is not so easy to determine a precise time of meridian passage of the sun
(also called Local Apparent Noon) no matter how you do it. We have better ways to navigate covered elsewhere in this book. This method, however, is
indeed useful in an emergency, and we also hope that it is useful for illustrating the principle of finding longitude.
Figure 10.2-1 Angular height of an aircraft light as a function of distance to the observer. When the light is low, a person at point A measures a higher angle (α) than a person at point B (β).
But as the light is moved farther and farther away, the two angles become the same, since the light rays become parallel. You can see this already in this picture. By the time you get to
about d10 or so these lines would be nearly parallel. But these are still earthly scales. The distance between A and B could be at most some 8,000 miles (the earth’s diameter), so at the
scale shown, this would only be about 80,000 miles away. The closest stars are some 6 million-million miles away, so their light is not only parallel across the earth, but across the entire
orbit of the earth.
Figure 10.2-2 Stars are so distant (10 million million miles) that the light we see is parallel over the full span of the earth’s orbit, only about 2 x 93 million miles.
Because the light from a single star hits the spherical earth in parallel rays, we can develop the geometry upon which cel nav principles are based. The
angle we observe for the star can be related to our distance from the point where the star appears overhead, as shown in the next section.
But now with a little basic geometry, we can be much more specific. We only need two intuitive rules: first when two straight lines intersect, the angles
they make are the same on each side, and secondly we need the rule that when two parallel lines intersect with another straight line they cross at the same
angle. These rules are shown in the inset to Figure 10.3-2.
Figure 10.3-2 Geometry of a sextant sight, showing that the zenith distance z is equal to the distance from the observer to the GP.
As we learn elsewhere in this book, the angle a star makes with the true, flat horizon is called Ho (observed height). We get this in the normal
procedures after removing complicating factors such as refraction in the atmosphere, which bends the light rays, and our own height above the water,
which exaggerates this angle; but these details do not matter at this point.
We also define the angle between the star and the zenith above us as the zenith distance, z. So we have Ho, as the angular height of the star above the
horizon, and z as the remaining angle on up to the zenith. And since our zenith is always perpendicular to our horizon, by definition Ho + z is always equal
to 90º.
Now we can look at two specific light rays from this one star; the one going through the GP and the one we see in our sextant. On Figure 10.3-2, follow
the light ray through the GP to the center of the earth and see where it intersects the line projected down from our zenith. It is to this angle that we apply
our geometry theorem. The two light rays are parallel, so the angle must equal z, the zenith distance.
Now we return to the definition of a nautical mile, and in doing so, we actually learn why a nautical mile is defined the way it is. In much of navigation
we just refer to a latitude difference in terms of nautical miles, such as 38º N is 10º south of 48º N, so we know it is 600 nmi south, because 1º of latitude
equals 60 nmi. But the definition is actually much more general than that.
The general rule is that any two points on earth have a great circle distance between them, and that distance along the surface of the earth is equal in
nautical miles to the angle subtended by a line from each of the two points on earth to the center of the earth. We start with a three-dimensional picture of
two points on a globe, then we draw a line from the center of the globe to each of these points, and imagine the angle between those two lines. The distance
between those two points on the surface will equal in nautical miles the number of arc minutes in that angle. We do this reckoning with latitude routinely,
but that is just a special case where one of the points happens to be due north or south of the other. The definition is true for any two points on the globe.
Thus we have the fundamental rule of celestial navigation that the zenith distance is the distance from us to the GP. If we measure the height of a star to
be 30º, then the GP of that star at that moment is located 60º or 3600 nmi away from us—because Ho + z is always 90º.
So we are sneaking up on the principles of cel nav. We have learned, for example, that it is the zenith distance that is the most primary number, not the
sextant height above the horizon. We only measure that because we have a good reference for it (the horizon), whereas we have no usable reference for the
point overhead. Thus with the sextant we in effect measure our distance to the GP, and then the Nautical Almanac tells us where the GP was at that
moment.
To put things in a historical perspective, compare what we are discussing here in 2015 (Figure 10.3-2) with Figure 10.3-3, which illustrates how
Eratosthenes measured the circumference of the earth in 250 BC.
Figure 10.3-3 How Eratosthenes measured the circumference of the earth in about 250 BC. On the solstice he knew the sun was overhead in Syene (Aswan, 24º 4’N, 53º 7’E), as the sun
was known to shine directly down deep wells. It was also known that in Alexandria, 428 nmi to the north, on the same day at noon there were indeed shadows cast by the midday sun. He
measured the sun’s zenith distance of 7.2º there at that time, probably from the length of a shadow as shown. The distance between these two cities was well known at the time. Since the
measured angle turned out to be 1/50th of a full circle, the full circle must be 50 × the distance between the cities.
We are not sure exactly how well he knew it at the time, but we now know there is 428 nmi of latitude between these two cities. This gives a result that is almost spot on the right
circumference. Celestial navigators know the circumference of the earth automatically, because of the definition of a nautical mile, namely: 360º × 60 nmi/1º, or 21,600 nmi.
The main uncertainty in figuring his exact accuracy stems from not knowing the exact definition of his unit of length. Using all variations of this and accounting for the offset to the west of
Alexandria, his error was somewhere between 0.1% and 16%. In any case, very good. The factor of exactly 1/50th is just a numerical accident from the geometry of the measurement.
What is rather more curious than the greatness of his achievement—he had so many, in various sciences—is that Columbus was totally oblivious to this information 1240 years later. Other
navigators before Columbus and after him were well aware of the dimensions of the earth. It was not long after Columbus’s voyages that this knowledge all resurfaced and world charts
proliferated.
Syene had been a famous city in Egypt, long before the Aswan dam. Since ancient times it was the southern frontier, located at the first cataracts that blocked farther navigation of the Nile
to the south. It was a 3 to 4 week sail from Syene to Alexandria. The stones of the pyramids were quarried near there and shipped north.
First recall from Section 10.1, that the GPs of all cel nav bodies circle the earth from east to west at a constant rate of 15° of longitude per hour, and
each body is locked in on its own unique latitude called the declination of the body. In Figure 10.4-1 we show the sun moving westward along a northern
declination.
z is the zenith distance to the sun. The sun first comes over the eastern horizon when z is just less than 90°, and as the sun moves toward our meridian,
the zenith distance gets progressively smaller. z is at a minimum when the sun crosses our meridian (local apparent noon), and then it starts to increase
again as the sun moves to the west of us.
But we know that z + Ho = 90°, so the height of a body in the sky at any time is 90° - z. That means that when z gets smaller, Ho gets larger and vice
versa. So bodies rise and peak out in height and then descend as they move west because they are tracking along a fixed latitude line as we watch them.
When they cross our meridian, they are at their peak height in the sky.
That one sextant sight has established what is called a circle of position. Everyone on that circle at that time would have measured exactly the same
angular height of that body. We know we are on that circle, but we do not know where. It is analogous to measuring the compass bearing to a lighthouse,
from which we establish a line of position. We know we are on it, but we do not know where.
From one body we get one circle of position. Now do the same thing for another body and you see how it works. These two circles of position will
intersect and we are located at the intersection of the two. The fact that there are two intersections does not matter; we can rule one out by just recalling
very roughly what directions we were looking, or by taking a sight to a third body (Figure 10.5-1.)
Now, how do you do this from your back porch? We will need a current almanac, or look up the data online at www.starpath.com/usno. First we need
to identify two navigational stars that we can see in the sky at the same time, any time of night, that happen to be 40 to 100º apart in bearing. You can learn
that from the almanac or from the link provided. A navigational star simply means one from the list given in the almanac’s daily pages. Or if there is a nice
bright planet in the sky, use it along with a star off to the side of it.
Then make a simple device as shown in Figure 10.5-2 that we can use to measure the height of a star or planet from land. With this tool we do not need
a sea horizon to measure the height above the flat horizon we care about (Section 10.3). Measure the angular height of the two bodies you chose and note
the time of each observation, then convert those times to UTC.
Figure 10.5-2 Makeshift plumb bob sextant. With a little practice, you can measure star heights to an accuracy of ± 1°, or maybe a bit better, which is plenty good enough for this
demonstration.
Now use the almanac or link provided to look up the declination and GHA of the first body sighted. The Lat of the GP is the same as this declination,
and the Lon W of the GP is the GHA of the GP if the GHA is less than 180. If the GHA is greater than 180º, then subtract it from 360º and label the result
Lon E.
Next figure the zenith distance, z = 90º - Ho. We will just assume for this example that what we measure with the plumb bob is the same as Ho. Then
convert z to nmi by multiplying by 60.
We have all the data we need; now we need a trick to avoid the math. There are two solutions. If you have a globe you can use it. Just plot the GP on
the globe and then use the latitude scale on the globe for your miles scale and with a drawing compass draw a circle around that point with a radius equal to
the zenith distance. Your first sight has told you that you are somewhere on that circle. It should run through your location, keeping in mind that it is not
easy to do all this drawing very precisely and we only know the radius to about 60 nmi at best.
Then follow the same procedure for the second star, and these two circles will intersect at your back yard! Or at least within the errors of the method.
The main goal is to convince yourself that this is all there is to the principle of cel nav.
Plotting on a globe is likely the easiest approach if you have one. An alternative is to use a great circle (GC) chart for the plotting. You can buy full size
versions of these as print on demand products from many NOAA chart dealers online. There are two classes of these charts, called sailing and tracking.
You can practice with the two free downloads we have of the tracking charts at www.starpath.com/celnavbook. The sailing versions have better resolution,
but you will have to choose your stars more carefully to be sure that their GPs fit on the chart.
Do this exercise just once and you will have the principles of cel nav in hand. Note that measuring accurate distances on GC charts can be tricky. An
alternative is to use an echart program and draw a large range ring about the GP.
One can accept that such a computation is doable and just quit there. To learn more about how this takes place, we need to back up to review some
trigonometry, starting from basics that are more commonly known.
Plane Trigonometry
Figure 10.6-2 shows a flat triangle along with one of several equations than can be used to relate its sides. The phrase “solving the triangle” means that
if we know parts of it, we can determine the other parts. Just looking at it we can tell that knowing the length of the three sides determines uniquely the
angles between the sides. (The reverse is not true; the three angles alone could define any number of triangles of different sizes.) More specifically,
knowing any sequence of side-angle-side or angle-side-angle also uniquely determines the triangle.
Figure 10.6-2 An arbitrary plane triangle showing one of several equations that can be used to solve for all parts given side-angle-side (a-C-b). There are wonderful resources online that
offer a quick review of trigonometry, or an easy introduction.
Mathematicians have worked out the equations that solve the triangle based on these observations, and on the fact that the sum of the angles in a plane
triangle must equal 180º. The most famous of these solutions is side-angle-side when the angle is 90º forming a right triangle. The general equation then
reduces to the Pythagorean theorem: a2 + b2 = c2.
In plane trigonometry, it is easy to prove any of these results for an arbitrary triangle by drawing the triangle to scale and measuring the results with
ruler and protractor.
The triangle can be solved in two ways. We can use formulas or we can use tables. There are multiple formulas that will solve this triangle, but in a
sense the easiest and most reliable equations are:
Sin(Hc) =
Sin(dec) × Sin(aLat) + Cos(dec) × Cos(aLat) × Cos(LHA).
And once we have found Hc,
Cos(Z) =
[Sin(dec) - Sin(aLat) × Sin(Hc)] / [Cos(aLat) × Cos(Hc)].
Sign rules: (1) All angles are treated as positive, regardless of hemisphere, except for contrary name, make declination negative, regardless of hemisphere.
(2) If the final Z is negative, then Z = Z + 180, regardless of hemisphere.
Alternatively, we can solve the triangle with Sight Reduction Tables. There are several styles of these tables (Pub. 249, 229, NAO, and others), but they
all do the same thing. You tell them dec, aLat, and LHA and they tell you Hc and Zn. Chapter 5 explains how to use these tables.
The traditional method of cel nav uses these tables to find Hc and Zn. Computed solutions (using computers, calculators, or mobile apps) use the
formulas.
A sample Pub. 249 solution is shown in Figure 10.6-4. We can get the same result by direct computation:
Figure 10.6-4 Sample of Pub. 249 solution to the navigational triangle. When you are at latitude 32° looking at a star in the same hemisphere that has a declination of 28° that is 285° west
of you, you will see that star at a height of 26° 16’ above the horizon in a direction of 072° true.
Sin (Hc)=Sin(28)xSin(32)+Cos(28)xCos(32)xCos(285)
Sin (Hc) = 0.44258, and
Hc = Arcsin(0.44258) = 26.2686° = 26° 16.1’
Cos(Z)=(Sin(28)-Sin(32)xSin(26.2686))/Cos(32)
xCos(26.2686)
Cos(Z) = 0.30894, and
Z = Arccos(0.30894 ) = 72.0°
Figure 10.6-5 News items from the past showing one navigation system replacing the other as the “New” navigation.
The Sumner line of position required two lengthy computations and led to an LOP that was a chord of the circle of equal altitude—two points on the
circle with a line drawn between them. Then 30 years later in 1873, the French sea captain Marc St. Hilaire published another way to obtain this LOP (by
then known as a Sumner line) that took only one computation based on an assumed position. They still had to use complex log tables to solve the triangle in
those days, but the single computation was so much preferred that this method in turn quickly became the standard used throughout the world. It is identical
to what we do today, although we use different tables to solve the equations.
Today, in some textbooks you see the method we use referred to as the “Sumner Method” and in others as the “Marc St. Hilaire Method,” and in still
others the “Sumner-Marc St. Hilaire Method.” It really does not matter. Sumner invented the concept of using a straight line segment of the circle of equal
altitude as a celestial LOP (a Sumner line, being a chord of the circle), and Marc St. Hilaire discovered a simpler way to compute the Sumner line as a
tangent to the circle using just one computation.
St. Hilaire also introduced the concept of assumed position, which was a more logical name at the time as they did indeed use the DR position for the
computations. The DR position in those days (as it should be today) was always considered to be your best estimate of your position, taking all information
into account, and as such it was fair to assume you were there till you learned otherwise. Using the tables we do today, the assumed position is not the DR
position, so the name can be troublesome to some.
As time went by it was shown that this method could be applied to any two bodies and combined for a fix. In the early 1900s, the universal plotting
sheets were invented by navigation instructor Capt Fritz Uttmark, which pinned down the system that we use to this day. (Figure 10.6-6).
Figure 10.6-6 The first universal plotting sheet from 1918.
As for historic credit, it would seem best to consider this a joint contribution rather than two independent discoveries in that, every English speaking
ship in the world had been using the Sumner method for 30 years before St. Hilaire published his method.
The main change in sight reduction since then was the appearance of computers (on some level), which led to inspection tables, meaning we could put
away the log tables and just look up Hc and Zn from aLat, Dec, and LHA. This took place sometime in the 1930s, with the first set of popular inspection
type tables being Pub. 214 issued in 1936. Pub. 249 was introduced in 1951 for use with aircraft navigation, and remains in use today. Pub. 214 was
replaced with Pub. 229 in 1970. Pub. 229 offers more precision than does Pub. 249 and it can be used for all declinations.
The Nautical Almanac Office (NAO) Sight Reduction Tables that appear in the Nautical Almanac were developed by Admiral Thomas Davies together
with Paul Janiczek of the US Naval Observatory (USNO). They were first published in the 1989 edition of the Nautical Almanac and remain there today.
They are in a sense, a practicable step backward, reverting to log solutions in a convenient format that saves much space and weight on board at the
expense of a few extra steps in the sight reduction. They are an excellent backup to a computed solution.
...In Depth
11.28 Computed Solutions
Once we are confident that we know the traditional method of cel nav using tables, it is worth looking into a computed solution. It is not just faster; it will also lead to more accurate
navigation...
A key step in the evolution of sight reduction was the introduction of programmable calculators in the mid-1970’s, and in particular the HP-41C in
1980, which had a dedicated celestial navigation program that did both almanac data predictions as well as sight reduction. There are now numerous
computer programs and mobile apps to assist with celestial navigation.
The advent of the Internet has also brought with it several wonderful resources, notably the online data from the USNO (see www.starpath.com/usno).
...In Depth
11.29 NAO Sight Reduction Tables
If we do choose a computer solution, then a logical backup are the NAO tables included in every Nautical Almanac. They are also a reasonable choice as the primary means of sight
reduction, in that cel nav itself is a backup these days...
...In Depth
11.30 N(x) Table
Once we understand what sight reduction tables do for us, we might wonder what the bare minimum table might be do to the job. This method is likely that answer. It can be viewed as
a backup or just a novelty...
CHAPTER 11
IN DEPTH...
This chapter gathers special topics so they do not distract from the basics. There is no particular order to the topics. All are related to successful ocean
navigation on some level. Some are fine points not covered earlier, others are just more practice or expanded coverage of earlier topics.
New Terminology
Air Almanac
artificial horizon (AH)
departure
fit slope method
GPS, WAAS, COG, SOG, VMG
great circle sailing (GC)
International Date Line
local mean time (LMT)
Mercator chart
Mercator sailing
mid-latitude sailing
parallel sailing
rhumb line (RL)
set and wait method
Sky Diagrams
small angle rule
solar index correction
standard time
WWV and WWVH
zone time (ZT)
Figure 11.2-1 (Top) From an 1853 US Coast Pilot of the West Coast of North America. You can find it online in Google Books. A league is about 3 nmi. Nav texts in those days used miles
(nautical miles), leagues, and Spanish leagues, which are probably slightly different. This picture is not a departure. The text points out that this land can be seen in good conditions out to
18 leagues. 11.2-2 (Bottom) section of page 1 of the daily logbook for this voyage included in full in the 1851 edition of Bowditch. If you wish to brush up on compass directions used in
those days, see http://davidburchnavigation.blogspot.com/2015/02/boxing-compass.html
Overview of GPS
The Global Positioning System, known universally now as GPS, is an extensive satellite-based navigation system developed through Department of
Defense contracts during the early 1980s. It was conceived as a military system and remains under military control. The loss of the Korean airliner that was
destroyed when it wandered into Soviet air space in 1983 was influential in making the system accessible to civilian use to prevent similar disasters. As of
about 1989, it was available for public use on a limited basis; today it is the primary electronic navigation system for all vessels, vehicles, and individuals,
commercial and recreational. This system can tell you where you are (in terms of latitude and longitude) to an astonishing precision, anywhere on earth in
any weather, along with the direction you are moving and the speed of your motion, accurate to a tenth of a knot. The associated software in most devices
also provides course and distance to any other location along with other navigational data. Reasonably accurate elevation requires connection to a WAAS
satellite.
Before getting to the practical use of this tool, I will share the personal conviction that GPS is one of the most dramatic technological developments in
modern history. It is the first example of space science technology that has had significant influence on several aspects of the lives of everyone living in a
modern environment. Its application to guiding boats around the waters of the world was just the beginning of its public use. It has revolutionized the fields
of surveying, mapping, and exploration. GPS instrumentation mounted near geological faults and volcanoes are being used to measure otherwise
imperceptible motions of the earth’s surface for forecasting earthquakes and eruptions.
Combined with automated position broadcasts from moving GPS-equipped vehicles or vessels, tracking systems will eventually be developed to warn
of collision courses between cars, planes, or boats. Automatic Identification System (AIS) technology is the key to using GPS for this application. Right
now there are GPS units available that have stored in their memories the precise location of most navigational lights and buoys in the United States and
Canada. New applications are being developed or dreamed of hourly.
On the down side, the more efficient any tracking capability becomes, the more the question of privacy arises, not to mention security issues of
automated precision navigation. Or who is liable for the oil clean-up when a Japanese freighter collides with a Norwegian tanker carrying Brazilian oil to
France when both were navigated by American satellites that failed temporarily? Anyone can buy the equipment, and no licenses or permits are required to
use it. Political, social, and legal issues develop in parallel with this, as with all high impact technologies. Europe, China, Russia, India, and Japan all have
independent satellite systems that provide GPS navigation, although not all available worldwide.
Position Navigation
Your GPS position is indicated on the display screen in latitude and longitude, specified to the nearest one-thousandth of a minute, such as 47° 38.532’
N, 122° 24.795’ W. Recall that 1’ of latitude is about 6,000 ft, so a precision of 0.01’ corresponds to about 60 ft. The remarkable thing is that the numbers
you see in that decimal place are usually correct. This small hand held gadget communicating with satellites 10,000 miles away can tell you where you are
on the 200 million square miles of the earth’s surface to within a couple boat lengths! Generally they are accurate to within about 10 meters, or about 30 ft
or so. The last decimal place, 0.001’ of latitude, corresponds to 6 ft, so this number will bounce around as the unit is not accurate to that level.
If the unit suspects that the data may not be good, it will provide various warning signals or icons on the screen, with codes that tell of the problem such
as missing satellites, weak signals, etc. In modern units, most interactions with the satellites are all done automatically. Most will tell you some parameter
that is a measure of the accuracy of the fix with the present satellite configuration, expressed in feet. This is a statistical number, meaning if you wrote
down the position it gives many times, or made a continuous plot of your position, it would have some spread of values and this accuracy number is a
measure of the width of that spread. Any one reading could be off more than that, but that is the average error. Other than that, this is truly a “black box.”
You turn it on, and it tells you where you are.
Without echart software, using GPS, position navigation reduces to plotting your known latitude and longitude on the chart—to find out where you
really are! This is not always a trivial task in a small boat at sea, especially going to weather and especially if you wish to retain anywhere near the actual
accuracy you know. In fact in most cases, you cannot plot the accuracy you know, no matter how or where you do it, because of the limitations of the chart
scales. On a 1:25,000 chart (the largest scale typically available), a pencil dot 1/16th of an inch across spans 130 ft on the chart. If you can get that dot on
that chart in the right place, you know you are in the middle of it. Plot the position wrong by one dot width, and you have thrown away twice your
accuracy. On a 1:40,000 chart, that dot is 208 ft across.
An efficient approach underway in a small boat is to have latitude and longitude lines already drawn on the chart at convenient intervals and then to
locate your position relative to them, either by simply estimating the place or using a special tool. Some lines are, of course, printed on the chart to begin
with, but they are too far apart to be convenient. On a 1:40,000 chart, the parallel lines of latitude are typically printed only every 5’, which spaces them
about 9 inches apart. If you draw lines at every 1’ of latitude and longitude, it is much easier to estimate where your position lies by interpolation without
other tools.
The procedure can be improved by constructing a special plotting tool from cardboard or plastic. See Figure 11.3-1. It must be customized to specific
latitudes and chart scales, and it requires that the chart be prepared with latitude and longitude lines. I have used this plotting technique extensively in
sailboat racing whenever quick plotting was essential and echarts were not an option. It is faster than conventional methods, regardless of the tools or space
available.
Figure 11.3-1 Fast position plotting with a hand-made card.
Keep in mind, however, that no matter how you plot it, or even how you obtained the position fix in the first place, recording that position on a paper
chart and labeling it with the corresponding time remains the key to good navigation. The more often you do it, the more you will learn from it and the
better off you will be when you need it. (This is obviously using a paper chart. If you use echart navigation, the paper chart position can be recorded much
less frequently.)
Note on Antennas
Many users have found that portable GPS units appear to work fine when located below-decks at the nav station, without any further external antenna.
Nevertheless, an external antenna is highly recommended. When restricted to below-decks reception, the unit may not be using the best satellite
combination, which in turn could influence the accuracy of your COG and SOG. Also, what seems to work well in one location, may not work as well in
others, where there is, say, some part of the horizon blocked by terrain.
When locating the antenna, start out with a temporary location to test its practicality and then later make it permanent. On sailboats, it might be best to
start out at as low as practical (on the stern rail, for example) to minimize quick motion of the antenna which, again, could influence COG and SOG.
Solar panels on deck over the nav station area could block the GPS signals, and we discovered this nuance: the external antennas for Iridium Go satcom
units are for the Iridium connections only. Each unit has its own GPS unit for tracking, but the GPS antenna is the one on the box itself, not improved with
the external antenna. Thus it could have poor GPS data from below decks, even though the satcom connections are good.
Electronic Compasses
In the modern nav station, electronic compasses are standard equipment. We have them to run the autopilot, and we have them for a heading sensor
input to the radar so we can run it in a stabilized display mode. Another virtue is with networked nav stations and vessels in general; it means that with one
of these we can view our heading from anywhere on the boat via numerous wifi transmitters to mobile apps.
Unlike conventional compasses, which find magnetic north from gimbaled needles pushed that way by magnetic forces (as wind vanes line up with the
wind), electronic compasses find the field direction using gimbaled circuitry that figures that direction without actually pointing anything toward it. The
underlying principles are the same ones that make electric motors work, although highly refined here with extensive micro-processing of the signals. The
circuit design that senses the field is called a fluxgate, which is why these units are often called fluxgate compasses.
This technology has widespread applications on all vessels because it can be used for inputting digitized compass headings into other electronics for
computing currents or for dead reckoning. If a computer knows the compass heading and the knotmeter speed, and also knows the course and speed over
ground from GPS, then it can calculate the current, which is what causes these two sets of data to be different.
Some (few) mariners have become so enthralled with these devices that they forgo a standard magnetic steering compass, but that is a serious mistake.
Sparing the sea stories to back this up, I would never head off on any voyage that might require any level of navigation without a conventional magnetic
compass, regardless of the kind or size of the vessel, and especially regardless of what other electronic wonders I might have along. Fundamental prudent
seamanship requires that all electronics in a marine environment be regarded as luxuries (regardless of their costs), to be used when convenient but not
depended upon.
Handheld GPS units and many smartphones include a heading sensor, as also some include barometers, heel angle sensors, and electronic tide tables.
But be sure to check the compass function for sensitivity to being level. Some work reasonably well, others are completely useless, because if you tilt them
by 2°, the bearing changes 15°.
In one sense, we owe the long life of celestial navigation to electronic compasses. Once you have more than one compass on the boat, chances are that
at some point they are not going to agree with each other. When that happens, we need to check them with celestial navigation by taking a simple bearing
to a celestial body and then computing its true azimuth. See Section 11.21 for details. The COG from GPS might give you a rough idea of the compass
error in favorable conditions (including no current or leeway), but there is no replacement for the cel nav sight.
The amazing navigation functions available in phones and tablets are increasing daily, but their dependability is not. Just the contrary; these devices are
evolving toward consumer-grade products that are cheap and replaceable, but not intended for long-term use. Their attraction as a dependable tool for
navigation at sea is simply not there. The value of knowing cel nav for the prudent mariner will not diminish for a long time.
Figure 11.4-1 Schematic evolution of a Mercator projection with north straight up and proper bearings.
Referring to Figure 11.4-1, in Part A we see the globe with two round lakes of the same size, one at a high latitude and one near the equator. In Part B,
we peel open the cover of the earth and lay it flat on a chart, which shows all the surface of the earth but not usable for navigation. Next in Part C we distort
the longitude by pulling apart the meridians until we achieve the first goal of having north be a unique direction toward the of the chart. This calls for more
longitude distortion at higher latitudes and hardly any near the equator. The result is shown in Part D, where we see that our round lake at high latitude has
been distorted into an ellipse. If we want to measure useful bearings from one point to another, we must have landmasses with the proper shapes. Thus the
next step is to distort the latitude until the shapes of the land masses are correct. Again, this calls for more distortion at higher latitudes.
In Part E we have a proper Mercator projection. That is north is straight up everywhere, and we can measure the direction between any two points.
But we have paid a price for this. Although the shapes of land masses (and lakes) are now correct, their relative sizes are not correct. We have made
high latitude lands appear much bigger than they are. Greenland, for example, looks bigger than Australia on a Mercator chart, whereas in fact it is notably
smaller.
A consequence of this type of distortion is that the inches per degree of latitude increases with latitude. It is still true that 1º of Lat equals 60 nmi, but
the length of this 1º is longer at higher latitudes. We can still use the latitude scale as a miles scale, but we must do the conversion at the latitude of interest.
Figure 11.4-2 On a Mercator chart, Greenland looks much bigger than Australia, but it is actually notably smaller.
Sources of UTC
These days the easiest source of accurate UTC is through a GPS connection. Whenever your GPS is indeed in contact with the satellites giving you a
position, the time it displays will be accurate (in between satellite connections, it is just a good clock). On land, our cell phones and computers are usually
connected to a network that itself gets this time from the GPS satellites; so phone and computer are also generally good—so long as they are connected to a
network. As with the GPS receivers, when not connected they are just clocks, which we would have to monitor as we do other sources of time, which we
cover later. To check your computer time, use www.time.gov.
The traditional way of getting UTC, which is still available and used widely, is to tune into a HF radio station that is broadcasting the time. This can be
done with the same SSB transceiver used for communications, or from a shortwave receiver, which is the absolute minimum long distance radio we should
have onboard. You can also get time tics from a sat phone using the telephone numbers, which also lists frequencies of the WWV and WWVH time
broadcasts. These stations provide a tic at each second, and then they announce the time at each minute. The 29th and 59th tick are skipped, which gives
you a way to prepare for the announcement on the 59th, and then to check your watch setting on the 30th. If you have not heard these broadcasts before and
practiced setting or checking your watch, call one of the numbers to practice—not toll free, but well worth the few cents it takes to call.
WWV (Ft. Collins, CO) 303-499-7111
WWVH (Kauai, HI) 808-335-4363
There are a dozen or so other broadcast stations worldwide that provide UTC time. They are listed in NGA Pub. 117, Radio Aids to Navigation, which
includes a detailed discussion of these services. See www.starpath.com/celnavbook.
Nuances of the UTC definition along with how to learn UTC to the tenth of a second are mentioned in the Glossary, but Pub. 117 and the Time and
Frequency Division at NIST are the primary sources: www.nist.gov/pml/div688 .
Zone Time
Zone time (ZT) is the system used by merchant ships and navies when crossing an ocean—or we all use when sitting at the USCG office taking a
license exam. The time zone used in the zone time system is determined entirely by the longitude of your vessel at the time you record it. ZT will differ
from UTC by a whole number of hours called the zone description (ZD).
In this time system, the world is divided into 24 1-hour time zones, each 15º of longitude wide, centered at the standard meridians, which are the
longitudes that are multiples of 15, i.e., 0, 15, 30, 45... 165, 180. The borders between time zones thus take place at 7º 30’ either side of the standard
meridians. The only exceptions to this pattern are the two zones on either side of the International Date Line (standard meridian 180º, ZD = ±12). These
two zones are only 30 minutes wide (each spanning only 7º 30’ of longitude). See Figure 11.5-1. The labels of the times zones (ZD) are determined by the
nearest standard meridian divided by 15. Thus when 120 W is the nearest standard meridian, the ZD would be 120/15 = +8.
Figure 11.5-1 Zone-time zones defined by the gray meridians compared to various standard time zones outlined on the land masses. The zone descriptions and their alphabetic label are
shown at the bottom. These are navigator’s definitions of the ZD. Beware that computers and phones might label the time zones with the signs reversed. The label “z” (zulu) for ZD = 0
gives rise to the common notation of 1800z to mean 1800 UTC.
UTC = ZT + ZD,
where, again, the ZD is determined by your longitude. This formula essentially defines the sign (±) of the ZD. If your location is slow on UTC, i.e., any
west longitude, then the ZD of that location is +. Eastern longitudes have negative ZDs.
To find the ZD of any arbitrary longitude:
(1) Round the longitude to the nearest whole degree.
(2) Divide by 15.
(3) Then round the result off to the nearest whole hour.
For example, at Lon 036º 48’, we would get 37/15 = 2.46, so ZD = 2. At 37º 40’, we get 38/15 = 2.53, so ZD = 3.
Zone time zones are also assigned a letter to facilitate radio communications, as shown in Figure 11.5-1. ZD of +8, for example is letter U, “Uniform.”
In this system UTC is letter z, which has led to the common zulu abbreviation for UTC or GMT. Thus the valid time of a weather map can be listed as
1200z. This is a convenient notation, so long as we know what we mean and write clearly.
We leave it to those interested in history to discover why there is no J zone. There was a reason. And if you want to ask trick questions on your
navigation tests, remember ZD +12 and ZD -12 are just 30m wide, not the normal 1h. Using watch time, however, this fact and the Date Line itself will not
affect us underway at all.
Zone time is used worldwide; it never adjusts for daylight saving time. Your ZD is determined by your longitude regardless of the season. Zone time is
not used in civilian matters; it is designed for ocean navigation. A vessel using zone time will change the ship’s clocks each time they cross into a new time
zone. This serves a good purpose for those working at sea protected by labor laws and it keeps their daily schedules in tune with the sun, but this system
adds a totally unnecessary layer of complexity to navigation. Vessels that are not forced to use it, should avoid it. Small-craft navigators crossing oceans
are far better off using watch time, as discussed later. This recommendation cannot be over stressed!
Watch Time
Watch time (WT) is the practical solution to timekeeping in navigation and weather. It is simply the time on your watch. Thus to navigate by WT, I just
need to know the zone description of my watch. If I happen to have my watch set on Pacific Daylight Time, that would correspond to ZD = +7. Thus the
ZD of my watch is +7 and that is all I need to know, no matter what longitude I am at as I cross the Pacific. In fact, I can go back and forth across the Date
Line and never have to worry what date or time it is.
No matter where I am in the world, I find UTC by:
UTC = WT + ZD.
This is by far the best way to navigate, and we should always do so unless we are compelled to use ZT by labor laws or unions or some government
regulation. It is easy to see that if you work day and night on ocean crossing vessels, you would want some semblance of order to your daylight and meal
times, which would justify changing the ship’s clocks each time you cross a time zone.
On a private vessel, however, this time changing adds tremendous confusion to your weather work and navigation. It is much better to just live with the
fact that mid day might be 2 pm on your watch by the time you arrive—or set it ahead before you leave. In other words, you go an hour or two off local
time as you proceed, but that is not distracting. To minimize timekeeping errors do not change your watch time when underway. Wait till you arrive. You
are free to set the ZD of your watch that works best for you, but then do not change it till you arrive.
It is so important, one might guess there is more to say about it, but there is not. When you want UTC read your watch and add the ZD you have
assigned to the watch. There will be a watch error to apply before doing sight reductions, as discussed later, but that would be the same no matter what
timekeeping system you used.
You might say we have so many ways to get accurate time on a vessel these days why bother with all these precautions? The answer is we are teaching
cel nav here as if that is all you have to go by, and good timekeeping practice is a key factor. With no other source of time but your watch, you do not want
to risk losing the time, and changing the time zone—or in fact pushing any setting buttons at all—is the most probable time to lose it. More details are in
the Chronometer Log and Watch Error section later.
Chronometer Time
For completeness, we include here also the very worst type of timekeeping, the one called chronometer time (CT). It is UTC kept on a 12-hour watch
face, without specifying AM or PM! Absolutely no one in the world would consider using such a time system—that is, almost no one. This is the time
system used on USCG celestial navigation exams. It is the way the USCG helps support navigation schools, and we are grateful to them.
When a sight time on an exam is listed as 04h 16m 32s CT, the first thing the candidate must do is use other peripheral information in the question to
determine if this is 04h or 16h UTC. It is certainly doable; all problems have a ZT and a DR position, so we can DR to the location of the sight, figure the
ZD and from that the UTC of that DR position, and this must be consistent with what we are doing. Evening star sights should be just after sunset, for
example. It does require an overall awareness of what is going on, but this is rather more gestalt than called for on a navigation exam, especially since no
one uses that system.
Your longitude must be converted from an angle to a time, using the Arc to Time table in the Nautical Almanac. Use the + sign for Lon W and the - sign
for Lon E. Recall that the GP of the sun is moving from E to W, which helps us remember this. That is, if we are west of Greenwich, the sun goes by
Greenwich before getting to us, but if we are east of Greenwich, the sun goes by us on the way to Greenwich so our UTC of the event is earlier than the
UTC of the event at Greenwich.
Once we have the UTC of the event, we can convert that back to WT:
WT = UTC - ZD,
where again we are referring to the ZD we have the watch set to. We do not care what longitude we happen to be on.
The procedure for a voyage is then to rate your watch before leaving and then just check and record the error frequently in an ongoing chronometer log
so you can confirm that the rate has not changed. Once you get to your destination, you can set the watch again and start over.
We have to recognize that is part of traditional navigation technique, and the likelihood we will need it is small, but even in the satellite age the value of
navigating by the watch you wear and knowing its rate remains prudent. Many of us have some time ago given up watches to our cell phones, which have
become more amazing every year— but they have not become more dependable, they have actually become more disposable.
where HE is in feet and D is in nautical miles. The dip correction will then be given in minutes of arc. For e×ample, if HE is 8.5 ft and D is 1.35 miles, then
figure the dip as: dip = 0.416 × 1.35 + 0.566 × (8.5/1.35) = 0.562 + 3.56 = 4.1’, and use this value instead of the 2.8’ that you would find in the Nautical
Almanac for an HE of 8.5 ft. Remember that the dip correction is always negative, so it might be better to say, use - 4.1’ instead of - 2.8’. Then do all the
rest of the sight reduction in the normal way.
When HE is big and D is small you can end up with fairly large dip corrections, 30’ or more, compared to the few minutes of normal Dip, but don’t
worry about this. Go ahead and use it; you will find that your sights work out well. But you must be precise about the numbers used to calculate the dip. As
you practice a few, you will see that in some cases, if you just change the HE or the D by a small amount, it can have a large effect on the dip correction.
Nevertheless, if you do this carefully, you can make corrections to your sights the size of a county that will put you right back onto a small inland lake.
You might want to stuff the dip short formula down into your bag of tricks for use in real navigation, not just practice. It was developed for coastwise
navigation to allow for sun sights when you are very close to shore and the sun is over land. If a mile or so accuracy would help you out in coastwise
navigation, you can always take a sun line. With this in mind, there is a Dip Short Table in Bowditch’s American Practical Navigator, but the formula
given previously is much better; the Bowditch table increments are large, so you must usually interpolate.
Figure 11.6-1 Dip short definitions of HE, D, and Hs.
Remember too, that the dip short procedure is still an approximation. It is a good one, but it will never be as good as a proper horizon. So don’t look for
pin point accuracy when the corrections it calls for are very large. Individual sights may still be off a few miles when using it, especially if the horizon is
not even a shoreline, but a houseboat dock or the waterlines of boats moored on the other side. Think of dip short in Samuel Johnson’s words: “Sir, a
woman’s preaching is like a dog’s walking on his hind legs. It is not done well; but you are surprised to find it done at all.”
If you have the chance to plan your practice when sun or star bearings are in favorable directions (over the most distant shoreline) where the corrections
are small or nil according to the previous guidelines, then you will get good results. In any event, this a good trick to know.
For comparison, the formula for open ocean dip used in the Nautical Almanac is
which can be used for comparison or stashed away in a calculator if ever needed. We do not need this equation for routine work as it is solved in the dip
correction table.
CAUTION!
You will be looking straight toward the sun for this method and through a telescope to boot. So you must be very careful that all sun shades are in place
and you do not somehow distort your view and look around the edge of the shades. Do not under any circumstances look directly at the sun without it being
completely covered by the shades.
Procedure
Use the highest power scope you have for this. Monocular 6x35 or 7x30 are best if you have one. Adjust the shades if you have that option so the
reflected and direct view of the sun appear as different colors.
(1) Set the sextant to 0° 0.0’ and look toward the sun on a clear day. You will see something like shown in Figure 11.7-1, Step 1, in which we use the
convention that shaded sun is the reflected view on the right side of the horizon mirror and the unshaded one is the direct view through the clear glass of the
left side of the horizon glass.
Figure 11.7-1 Steps in the process of solar index correction. Dark disks are the reflected views.
(2) Adjust the side error to remove it by first adjusting the index mirror to be perpendicular to the frame of the arc and then adjusting the horizon mirror
so it is parallel to the frame as well. Then you will see the picture shown in Figure 11.7-1, Step 2, which is almost all index error with no side error.
Figure 11.7-2 Views through the sextant telescope with no index correction, with and without side error.
We use the rotation directions "toward" and "away," for convenience, but they must be defined carefully. The terms come from viewing the drum as
you read it. Toward means turning the drum clockwise, with the numbers decreasing—the numbers on the top of the dial are moving toward you. Away
means the opposite; counterclockwise, with numbers increasing, as the they move away from you.
During the actual sights you can benefit from this concept to keep track of which step you are on, but the logic of toward and away are lost as the drum
is then sideways. During the sights, clockwise and counterclockwise can be confusing, so this convention helps us keep this crucial part of the process in
order.
First we measure the “Toward value of the IC."
(3) Turn the micrometer away from you until all of the reflected image is well below the direct image.
(4) Now turn micrometer toward you slowly and uniformly so that the reflected image rises until the top edge of it just touches the bottom edge of the
direct image. And then read the dial. It should read something like 32’ on the scale—depending on your IC. Record this ON value. Accurate to the tenth. In
this running example we will call this 34.0’ ON. There is a form showing this example and several others in Figure 11.7-3.
Figure 11.7-3 These data are from friend and navigator Lanny Petitjean using an Astra IIIb sextant with a traditional mirror. He has since used the results to achieve numerous sights from
land with accuracies all below 0.4 miles and lunar distance sights leading to UTC accuracies below 30 seconds. Thanks Lanny. A form like this developed by Lanny is included in the Forms
Appendix.
(5) Now continue to turn, slowly and uniformly, in the toward direction until the bottom edge of the reflected image aligns with the top edge of the
direct image. If you overshoot, we need to start all over again! The idea is to be turning only in one direction when we stop. This time the dial will read
about 28’ but this will be an OFF the scale measurement, so we have to subtract whatever it reads from 60. In this example, let’s assume micrometer read
29.2’, which would be 60.0’-29.2’ = 30.8’ OFF the scale. Record this OFF value.
(6) Now take the difference between the ON value and the OFF value and divide that by 2 to find your IC. Just subtract the smaller from the larger. The
label of your result will be the same as the label of the larger value. In this example: 34.0 - 30.8 = 3.2’ and 3.2’/2 = 1.6’ and since 34 was ON, the answer is
ON, i.e., our IC is 1.6’ ON the scale.
(7) Now check your result by comparing to the actual semidiameter (SD) of the sun at the time of the sight. Our example was measured on 02/28/01
using an Astra 3b deluxe model sextant with traditional mirror. From the Nautical Almanac, we get that SD = 16.2’. The SD of the sun equals the ON value
plus the OFF value divided by 4. In this example, 34.0+30.8 = 64.8 and 64.8/4 = 16.2 which is right.
More Notes
A quick and dirty method to measure the IC this way, or maybe to double-check the result to see that it all makes sense, is just to align the reflected and
direct images on top of each other and read the dial. That reading will be your IC, it is just that the above procedure is a more accurate way to get the value.
In this case we would see what is shown here, depending on whether or not we had side error. In our example, the dial would read 1.6’ ON the scale when
either of the two right-side alignments were set.
Now you can repeat the full process turning always in the Away direction to get the "Away value of the IC." Careful data will often show a slight
difference for the Toward and Away values, even for a metal sextant. For plastic sextants, on the other hand, the toward and away values will almost
always be rather large, some few minutes or so.
Forms like those of Figure 11.7-3 are included in the Forms Appendix that you can reproduce and use for practice.
The homemade Bader solar filters described in the book How to Use Plastic Sextants: With Applications to Metal Sextants and a Review of Sextant
Piloting are ideal for this method. When using one of these filters this process is very easy and fast.
Figure 11.8-1 Close up of the notched arc and worm gear on a metal sextant. Plastic sextants have the same basic mechanism, although the worm gear is hidden by a plastic cover.
Angle settings in between whole degrees are made by rotating the micrometer drum. This rotation changes the angle continuously from one degree to
the next. The drum settings can typically be read to a precision of 0.1’ of arc making use of a Vernier scale printed along the edge of the drum. Hence if a
sextant were set to an angle of 32° 21.8’, we would read the 32° from the scale on the arc, the 21’ from the micrometer drum, and the 0.8’ from the Vernier
scale (Figure 11.8-2).
Figure 11.8-2 Micrometer drum and Vernier scale on a Davis Mark 15 Plastic sextant. Metal sextants are read the same way.
An ideal sextant has a very positive action of the micrometer drum, meaning no slack in the gears. Turn it to the right by 1’ and immediately the angle
increases by 1’. Stop and turn it to the left and it immediately starts to go down. A good metal sextant in good condition will behave properly in this regard.
Plastic sextants, on the other hand, tend to have a bit of slack in this mechanism, consequently we get slightly different results when turning to the right to
achieve alignment as opposed to turning to the left to achieve the same alignment. This is a well known issue with plastic sextants and it is mentioned in the
manuals for the Davis Mark 15 and Mark 25 plastic sextants (it does not apply to the more basic Mark 3 model that does not have a micrometer drum).
This crucial point is not mentioned at all in the Egler article cited earlier.
But there is more to this story. We cannot investigate slack in the gears without some means of observing the effects of our rotation of the drum. In
other words, we have to decide what is or is not in alignment once we rotate the drum. An obvious time to study this effect is during the IC measurement,
which is typically done with the sextant set to 0° 0.0’ while viewing a distant sea horizon.
The sea horizon is the most convenient and most commonly used method, but for precision work it has the limitation of not often presenting a perfectly
sharp line between sky color and sea color. Look very carefully at the best horizon and you often see—or at least appear to see—a very narrow line of some
other color right at the horizon, or some other slight disruption of a perfect line. Consequently, even when we have a perfect sextant with no gear slack at
all, we can still get the appearance of a slight gear slack because the imprecision of the reference line leads to some variance from sight to sight in what the
observer might call perfectly aligned. The amount of this variance will depend on the nature of the horizon, the skill of the observer, the power of the
telescope, and with the sextant model. A 6- or 7-power scope is better for IC checks than the 4-power scopes that are standard on most sextants, and this
effect is naturally larger when viewed in the 2-power scopes on plastic sextants.
Figure 11.8-3 Three views through the sextant telescope with side error but no index error as you rock it to the right and left.
This may also require some collateral adjustment of the index mirror. With plastic sextants we have found that it is often useful to give each mirror
housing (not the mirror itself) a bit of a flick with the finger to help the seating of the mirrors before and after the adjustments. If the flick changes things,
you have to keep working on it. (Don’t flick it any harder than you would flick your own nose!)
Then with the sextant set to 0° 0.0’, view the horizon and turn the drum “toward” you (clockwise, arc angle decreasing–see Section 11.7) to clearly
separate the two horizons viewed directly and by reflection. Then slowly turn the drum “away” from you (counterclockwise, arc angle increasing) until the
horizons just first appear as a smooth straight line, which is what we call in alignment. Be sure to sneak up on this very slowly so you do not overshoot the
alignment. We want the reading just as they first become aligned.
Confirm that you are aligned by panning (yawing) the sextant right and left a bit to verify that there is no detectable motion along the horizon (Figure
11.8-4). This is a more accurate method than just looking straight at it and concluding it is aligned. If you are just very slightly unaligned, you will notice a
slight bump moving right and left at the intersection of the two views, direct and reflected. Once confirmed, record the IC reading to the nearest 0.1’ and
label this IC measurement with an “A” to note that you were turning the drum in that direction and a “touch” to note that this was the setting for the first
touch of the two horizon views in alignment. If you have overshot the alignment, start all over again.
Figure 11.8-4 View through the sextant telescope with the index mirror almost exactly parallel to the horizon mirror. Look for this small bump moving along the horizon to detect that you are
very close but not quite perfect yet on the alignment for an IC check.
Now to continue, first double-check your notes to confirm which way you are turning and think through the motion, then very slowly and carefully
continue turning in the away direction until you can first detect that you are no longer aligned. Again, this is best done by doing a slight rotation then
panning the horizon, then another and another pan, until you can detect some motion along the horizon which indicates that you are no longer aligned.
Then read and record the new IC and label it with “A” and “leave,” meaning this was the value when you left the alignment.
Repeat this five or six times in the away direction and then do the same in the toward direction. This type of measurement will show what we are up
against. You have effectively measured the angular width of “perfect alignment.” With a metal sextant and a sharp horizon, the touch and leave values will
typically differ by only a few tenths, which reflects our limits on locating the horizon precisely. Put another way, if we just randomly set the sextant to
alignment on a series of sights, we could fairly expect to get at least this level of spread in the values we measured, since anywhere between “touch” and
“leave” gives the same appearance of alignment.
More to the point at hand, however, is that with a metal sextant, the spread in the touch and leave values will show little if any difference when
measured in the toward or away direction. With a typical plastic sextant, this is not the case. Not only will you detect larger spreads in the touch and leave
values, you will also most often notice a significant difference in the IC values measured in the toward and away directions, which is a measure of the slack
in the gears—or, if not that, at least some measure of the general behavior of the device (the actual worm gear in the plastic sextants is metal, but it seats
into notches in plastic).
These IC differences in plastic sextants can also vary from day to day and from the beginning to the end of a given sight session—even if the
temperature of the device has not changed at all during the session. Sometimes the toward and away differences might be zero and other times on the same
device (without having adjusted the mirrors) be as large as 4’ or 5’. We must stress here, however, that we are describing operational behavior, and not
necessarily a limit on the ultimate accuracy obtainable with the sextants. The exercise is intended to show how users might verify for themselves why
special care must be taken when doing celestial sights with plastic sextants. Next we show procedures that will to a large extent compensate for these
limitations.
More or less regardless of how this is done, on the average (seasons, latitudes, length of sight series, etc) one will be lucky to find the center of such a
curve to any better accuracy than about plus or minus 1 minute. Sometimes better, when the sun is high and you have good data, but more often worse. It is
not that the answer will be wrong by that amount, but your uncertainty will be that large, which is almost equivalent in crucial navigation. One minute of
time is the same as 15’ of longitude; so as a broad rule of thumb, one might say that this method could give you longitude to within about 15’. This is far
worse than one can obtain with a conventional running fix over some few hours.
But the problem is rather worse than that. Two matters of principle make the previous simple approach not quite right. One depends on the date, the
other on your motion north-south. We won’t analyze these in detail, the results vary with about everything, but we will add one numerical example at the
end.
The date issue is related to changes in the declination of the sun between morning and afternoon sights used as the two reference points. Near the
equinoxes, the declination changes about 1’ per hour. So a 6-hour run up and over the peak would result in a declination change of 6’. This could yield an
error in the longitude of as much as 3 or 4’, depending on latitude.
The more important issue is the vessel’s travel to the north or south during the extent of the sights used to find LAN. The situation is illustrated in
Figure 11.9-2. Here we assume the vessel moves from Lat A, the location of the first sight, to Lat B, the location of the last sight. Note that when underway
the path of the sun (Hs vs. WT) is not symmetric. So figuring the mid point between A and B will yield a time error in LAN by one-half of the difference
between A’ and B. In the following example this is about two-and-a-half minutes, or an error in longitude of about 40’.
Figure 11.9-2 Path of the sun at Lat A and Lat B and how it appears if measured while traveling from A to B. The time difference A’ to B is twice the error in true longitude without
corrections.
When not moving, only the declination issue must be resolved, and certainly when moving one could make all the corrections needed to get good data
from these “double-altitude” sights for longitude. But the corrections needed are long and tedious. One is better off just doing a running fix, which is easy
and standard.
We stress this, since so many modern texts simply state the simplest form of this procedure without warning of errors and uncertainties, which might
give the navigator the impression that it might yield standard accuracy, which it does not. It is best to reserve this procedure to emergency situations where
other tools and procedures might not be available.
Keep in mind that any of these universal chart sections begin to lose accuracy for distances of much more than 100 nmi from the center once you are
above about 40º Lat.
As a historical note, the first universal plotting sheets were invented by Capt. Fritz Uttmark in 1918. We have a sample of his original sheet in Figure
10.6-6.
Assuming our compass and log are well calibrated (meaning in practice compass right on all headings within 2º or better and log right to 2% or better at
all speeds), the reasons the DR could go wrong beyond these instrument uncertainties would typically be a combination of these factors: (1) ocean current,
(2) leeway, (3) helm bias, and (4) blunder in the logbook entry.
(1) Ocean currents average about 0.5 kts worldwide, but in special cases like the Gulf Stream they can be well over 4 kts, although such strong current
patterns are well monitored and reported. The worst enemy of good DR are mesoscale current eddies that float around the ocean in unpredictable locations.
They can have currents of 1 or 2 kts spanning areas of up to several hundred miles. Atlas predictions of climatic currents and numerical ocean model
predictions for recent currents are available, but they do not account well for the specific eddies we might encounter. See www.starpath.com/currents. We
can detect ocean current ourselves underway by comparing course and speed made good with our logbook records of course and speed. With GPS we can
do so in real time, but using cel nav it takes a day or so to piece this together.
(2) Leeway sets us downwind when sailing to weather in strong wind. Although typically in the 3º to 6º range, it can be as much as 15º or so, but not
likely more as we tend to fall off at some point, which dramatically lessens the leeway. Leeway, unlike current, changes only our direction made good, not
our speed. Leeway is also an important factor in very light air. In short, whenever our vessel is not operating in the conditions it was designed for, we will
slip downwind.
(3) Helm bias is an insidious factor known to be a challenge to good DR since the 18th century. It means simply you are not making good the course
you think you are steering and subsequently record in the logbook. In big waves we tend to fall off briefly at each wave to keep from pounding and sailing
downwind we might come up more often on the wind to keep our speed in light air, or again fall off in stronger wind to surf down waves. Or we might
simply steer a course that is easier to keep the sails full or we might steer a course that makes the boat go faster because it is more fun. In short, for one
reason or another, we are not making good the course we think we are steering and consequently record in the logbook. Without GPS, the only way to learn
something of this is for the navigator to sit quietly for some time and watch the helm.
With GPS tracking this is easy to see as you have your actual course painted out on the computer screen, but without electronics we must simply be
aware of this and watch for it. It can also take the form of writing in the logbook the course you were supposed to steer rather than the one that was actually
steered most of the watch—that is, not making an honest effort to recall the best average course.
(4) Logbook blunder is just that. You record the time as 1534 when you meant 1543 or a course as 306 when you meant 316. This source of error
cannot be ruled out and it can take some detective work to track this down if an obvious error somewhere is apparent. It is something to look for if after
good results for an extended time, your DR is suddenly off a lot—though this could also be caused by sailing into a strong current eddy.
All of this analysis assumes that you have a handle on the uncertainty of your celestial fix. We must come to conclusions more slowly when the fix is
weak, such as a running fix in which one of the sight sessions had only one or two LOPs.
Evaluating DR Accuracy
Once we have this DR offset data we need a way to evaluate it. Is the error we see large or small? Are we doing a good job at DR or not? The expected
uncertainty in a DR position depends on how far you have sailed since the last fix and it depends on how long this took. We are talking here about DR
uncertainty, not DR error. Your DR position could be spot on, even though it does indeed have a larger uncertainty. Likewise, when looking at our
measured DR errors we want to know if these are within expected uncertainties.
The conclusion we have come to over the years is that in a typical small craft at sea, we should expect our DR position to become uncertain by about
7% of the distance run or by the distance set in a current of about 0.7 kts in an unknown direction. We are generally safe to just use the larger of the two
and not combine them. Short distances over a long time are generally dominated by the “error current” concept, whereas long distances over a short time
are dominated by the percentage of distance covered. Typical voyage legs might have these two evaluations about the same.
After running 4h at 30 kts, you would DR for 120 nmi and be best to assume that this position is uncertain by about 8.4 nmi (0.07 × 120). The current
factor would be just 0.7 × 4 = 2.8 nmi. But sailing at 3 kts for 40h (still covering 120 nmi) the uncertainty is no longer 8.4 nmi, but closer to 0.7 × 40 = 28
nmi. Again, this is not the error to expect, it is just the uncertainty you should keep in mind when evaluating the next fix, or when making any crucial route
decisions before the next fix. We would hope that our next fix would show us that our DR was much closer than these uncertainties, and this would mean
that none of the four sources of DR error listed earlier has dominated our navigation.
If you consistently do better than these guidelines, then you are doing fine. If you cannot achieve that on average, then a systematic analysis of the
errors themselves might help you discover the source of the error. In other words, if you are on a long more or less constant course over several days, and
your DR error direction is almost always straight ahead but 6% ahead of where you thought your were, then chances are your log is reading too low. From
then on you can just bump your runs up by 6% and be back on track.
Compass errors will also show up nicely after holding a steady course downwind for some days. Sailing upwind in strong wind, on the other hand, you
are almost certainly going to find DR errors to leeward. The log will be about right, but the course made good will be some 10º to 20º downwind of
expected. Helm bias, wind-driven current, and leeway are all small on their own, but they add up in the same downwind direction.
To make a quick estimate of the effect of sailing the wrong course, recall the Small Angle Rule that 6° = 10%. It scales down forever and up to 18° =
30%. This means a right triangle of 6° has sides in ratio of 1 to 10. A 3° triangle has sides 1 to 20. For 12° triangle the sides are about 1 to 5, and so on. It is
a very useful shortcut for navigators to remember; it has numerous applications.
Put into our context, if you sail 100 miles and your compass is wrong by 6° you will be off your intended track by 10 nmi, which is 10% of the distance
run. The goal of 7% DR means you must make good a course within about 4º of what is recorded in the logbook, assuming everything else has no error at
all.
The saving grace, meaning why this is not quite as hard as it seems, is we are assuming we have taken systematic errors into account on some level,
meaning we correct for current and leeway as best we can when needed. In this case, our remaining errors are random, and could be just as well to the left
as to the right, and so on.
In the Error Analysis, dT is time difference between fixes in hh:mm; dT(h) is same time interval in decimal hours. dLog is log difference, or distance run between fixes. Error is the range
from DR to Fix. The % listed is (Error/dLog)*100. The Drift is Error/dT(h), which is the speed of the error current. The Set is bearing from DR to Fix, which is the direction of the error current.
Figure 11.12-1 Section of the Nautical Almanac daily pages showing twilight and sunrise times. A similar section shows the sunset sequence. Refer back to Figure 5.2-1 for the perspective
on the horizon.
Western Longitudes
Step 1. Choose a-Lon° = DR-Lon° and choose a-Lon’ = GHA’
Step 2. Now look at the difference between DR-Lon and a-Lon. Call this Delta
Step 3. If Delta is less than or equal to 30’ you are done. The AP = a-Lon° a-Lon’ = DR-Lon° GHA’
Step 4. If Delta is greater than 30’, then we need to change a-Lon° by 1°, either up or down according to Step 5.
Step 5. When Delta is greater than 30’, if GHA’ is greater than 30, then decrease a-Lon° by 1°, but if GHA’ is less than 30, increase a-Lon° by 1°.
Eastern Longitudes
Step 1. Choose a-Lon° = DR-Lon° and choose a-Lon’ = 60’ - GHA’
Step 2. Now look at the difference between DR-Lon and a-Lon. Call this Delta
Step 3. If Delta is less than or equal to 30’ you are done. The AP = a-Lon° a-Lon’ = DR-Lon° GHA’
Step 4. If Delta is greater than 30’, then we need to change a-Lon° by 1°, either up or down according to Step 5.
Step 5. When Delta is greater than 30’, if GHA’ is greater than 30, then increase a-Lon° by 1°, but if GHA’ is less than 30, decrease a-Lon° by 1°.
Again, after a few practice ones, you will not need these sort of formal guidelines.
If time permits, work a few of the exercises that follow and then store this table somewhere. After some actual practice at sun lines and running fixes at
sea, I think you will find that this is a pretty handy table.
The location of the nav station doesn’t really matter much. They usually get placed next to the companionway, which is good since you can yell back
and forth to the cockpit from there. But this is also a very wet place. So it pays to have a spray curtain built that hangs between you and the companionway.
This serves two purposes. First, it keeps your gear dry—or more precisely, limits the water on your charts to that which runs off of your own rain gear.
Second, it blocks out the light so that your work at night does not interfere with the helmsman.
This last point is an important one. You almost always have to work at night, but it is equally important that no light at all get out to the cockpit. As you
know, even the faintest light makes steering at night very difficult. Going fast in big waves on a dark night, the helmsman has very little for orientation and
it can be dangerous to interfere with that. Often even stock steering compass lights are too bright in these cases. In short, it pays to think this through so you
don’t end up duct taping yourself into a cocoon.
As for the nav table lights themselves, I have never seen a specialized nav table light that found its way onto the ideal list. I refer here to the special
ones of various designs intended to emit focused light or dim light or red light and so on. The famous, standard goose neck light, for example, is near
useless since, goose neck or not, you can’t see the whole chart with them. Lift the chart table lid, and you can’t see anything. A different, more expensive
type that comes close to solving the problem is mounted on a pivot and is detachable for hand use. It has variable intensity and a red light option. Perhaps
two or three of these—one stored in a bag for hand use, since they can be difficult to get in and out of the pivot—might do the job, but it is not just a matter
of buying one of these fancy lights and screwing it into wherever it seems to fit best.
For longer jobs, I prefer a fixed white light over the table and then cover the entire area someway. For short jobs, a hand held crew light does the job
well provided it has a permanent home near the table so you can always find it when you need it. Individuals will likely differ on this, but I find it difficult
to see pencil lines in red light. Also the coloring on charts looks different in red light and takes some getting used to. Red light, by the way, has no special
significance to protecting night vision. The main factor is intensity, and red lights are not bright, hence their value. A low level white light is just as good,
and to me preferable.
Seat and light are important, but not the most important. The single most important aid to navigation without doubt is a pencil holder (for pencils and
dividers) and a holder for your parallel rulers that is within arm’s reach in front of you, outside of the chart table. With these holders, you can always find
your tools when you need them and you always have a place to put them between uses. Otherwise, they will get lost or broken. Without these holders,
sometime in life you will want to draw a line, can’t find a pencil, won’t draw the line, and later regret it.
For many years I preferred thin-lead mechanical pencils, with the lead advance button down near the point, but this is obviously just a personal
preference. In later years, I tend to prefer standard pencils with standard sharpener—on larger vessels you might consider an electric pencil sharpener. Any
pencil and a way to keep it sharp will do. A No. 2 lead is traditionally considered optimum, with a No. 1 lead claimed to be so soft that it smears, and No. 3
too hard to see or erase. If your situation leads to damp charts, then No.1 is called for. Or at least have one at hand. Harder leads do not work well on damp
charts.
The space inside the chart table, under the lid, is essentially useless space to navigation. This may seem surprising, but check under the lids of a few
chart tables when you visit other boats to get the point—and you may get just that, the point of the dividers. The chart table is simply too convenient a place
to store what ever has to be put down in a hurry. My standard advice is this: make an absolute rule that nothing gets put in the chart table. Then when it fills
to overflowing, just forget about it.
My favorite pencil holder is a short tube attached to a shelf or bulkhead. The tube from an empty toilet paper roll is ideal—duct taped over the bottom,
with tissue stuffed inside to protect the bottom from divider points, then taped to the wall. This elegant design has made it across oceans more than once. It
holds pencils, pencil-type erasers, and dividers. As soon as engine keys, sunglasses, and various other things start appearing in it, remind people what the
chart table is for. A tall square plastic fruit juice bottle is convenient for this type of pencil holder, and this is the type I have used for years, always having
a few on hand and taking one onto each new boat. In a magazine story once about the Volvo Round the World race, they showed the nav station of one
boat that had more than $75,000 worth of electronic nav gear, and right in the middle of this stuff was taped to the bulkhead this exact type of (Odwalla)
juice bottle used for a pencil holder. Needless to say, this vessel won my heart immediately.
If you carry a backup steering compass, the chart table top is a good place to store it; so it can be used for navigation reference at the table. When
mounting it keep in mind what might be stored under it in drawers. Check it occasionally with the steering compass, and if they disagree start pulling
drawers open to see if the compass needle moves. If it does, you found the villain.
Some handheld bearing compasses can be mounted on or near the chart table and used for reference, but a dedicated, adjustable compass is the best bet.
These days digital fluxgate compasses are common and they provide the ideal nav station readout. Often they input into the GPS, or other electronics and
you can use that for the course readout. I prefer to mount the handheld bearing compass just inside the companionway so that it can be reached from the
cockpit without going below. Again, it will be used more often if it is easy to get to.
Besides the compass, it is very convenient to have electronic readouts below deck at the nav station for all navigation instruments. This makes logbook
entries easier for everyone and makes the tactics easier for the navigator. But this is clearly a luxury, especially the wind instruments. Electronic log
readouts are usually located at the nav station anyway, since there is little call for their values on deck.
If you want to figure current set and drift from the GPS values of speed and course over ground, it is best, almost necessary, to have a compass and
knotmeter readout below deck. Without this application, however, it is not so important to have a knotmeter readout at the nav station.
Unless it is intended for decoration, the barometer should be mounted in the nav station in clear view of someone standing next to the chart table—this
is where most crew stand when filling in the logbook. To be of any value at all you must be able to see straight into the barometer and be able to tap it—
assuming it is an aneroid device; this is not needed for modern electronic barometers. Generally, one is looking for small changes in pressure and you
simply can’t gauge these from an angle, leaning over some obstruction. It should also have a crew light mounted next to it for nighttime reading. Again, if
it is not convenient to get readings from it, logbook entries of pressure will be of little value. A well-positioned barometer can be valuable even for inland
day sailing or racing.
A sextant case rack is vital for offshore work and can be very valuable for inland and coastal sailing as well. Distance off by vertical sextant angle is an
important practical technique in navigation that doesn’t get used much, in part because most boats don’t have a sextant handy. The technique is easy to
learn and apply. Even if a sextant is on board, it is often buried. The solution is a convenient rack for the box, or better still some arrangement that mounts
the box itself to the bulkhead. I have often found that the bulkhead between nav station and quarter berth is a good place to mount such a rack. The sextant
is then in the quarter berth but high enough to not take up useful space and easy to reach standing next to the nav station.
With the box mounted, you take the sextant out and don’t have to worry about storing the box. A sextant sight to measure the angular height of a hill is
then just as convenient as taking a bearing to it. A bearing and a sextant height give you a fix. If this hill is the only thing in sight, you have just done a nice
piece of navigation.
For extended sailing, it pays to have headphone adaptors on all radios. This way the navigator can listen to weather reports without disturbing the off
watch. It’s also very helpful to have a built-in tape recorder, or a rack for your personal tape recorder near the radios. You can then tape weather broadcasts.
If reception is poor you need the tape to replay several times to get the message. Other times you may be busy or needed on deck. You can have the tape set
up, the radio tuned, and then just turn things on when your wrist alarm goes off and go back to what ever duty calls. Or you can ask someone to turn on the
tape and radio at a particular time and let you sleep.
One thing I have seen on several big boats that I always wanted to try but haven’t yet, although I know it will be good, is a small, battery-operated nav
station fan. Its purpose is simply to help cool off the navigator in hot weather. And before you start hollering wimp, wimp, wimp, let me give a scenario.
It’s 90° on deck in the tropics with plenty of wind and over 100° below decks with no wind. The head has been semi-clogged for more than a week, eight
sailors have been living in a 9 × 25 × 6-foot space for 2 weeks with no laundry service, a forgotten can of frozen orange juice somehow got misplaced in a
quarter berth locker and exploded 1 week ago, the boat is pitching and rolling in the trades, the other seven crew are on deck having a great time in the
fresh air—but the navigator is below decks with head spinning in the wooze, working out sun sights that must be done in an hour for the afternoon position
report. Now wouldn’t you grant this poor soul a small fan?
Celestial
—Metal sextant (with light or dim penlight on lanyard)
—Davis Mark 3 plastic backup sextant
—Digital quartz watch (shows seconds, 24h, stopwatch, countdown timer, alarm, and waterproof, indiglo type lighting)
—Back-up watch (plus check rate of a crewmember’s watch)
—Calculator or mobile app for sight reduction.
—Back-up calculator (same type, from crewmember)
—Waterproof container for calculators
—Spare batteries for calculator
—Sight reduction tables (229, 249, or rely on NAO tables in the Almanac, but if so take Starpath work form)
—Pub. 249 Vol. 1 Selected Stars for star-sight prep
— Nautical Almanac
—Universal plotting sheets (1 pad of 50)
—2102-D Star finder
—Small notebook for sight notes on deck
—List of potential star planet sights, dawn and dusk, start, mid, and end race locations.
—List of sun moon fix opportunities underway
Nav Station
—Pencil holder outside of chart table (very important)
—Plotter holder outside of chart table
—Foot brace to pin yourself in going to weather
—Curtain to keep light in and water out of nav area
—Rig for pen light backup to nav table light
—12V or D-cell operated small fan
—Bungee cord to wrap around table to hold down charts
—Alarm clock (or phone) that will wake you up
—Head phones for radios
Weather Prep
—MSC charts or equivalent.
—Barometer calibration table or graph
—Blank weather charts for plotting weather
—List of voice and fax broadcasts (times, freqs, contents, map times) spare fax paper and stylus, if used.
—Has fax machine been maintained lately? (as needed)
—Fax machine and SSB manuals
—Backup copies of your weather software (as needed)
—Telephone numbers and emails of software and services support.
—Unlock key for your satellite phone! (as needed)
Procedure
(1) Measure the index correction (IC) of the sextant very carefully, preferably by viewing direct and reflected views of a single star instead of the
conventional way of using the horizon.
(2) Choose two known stars that are separated by the approximate angle you want to test. To check the center of the arc, for example, look for stars
roughly 45° apart. The stars can be as high as you like, but neither should be lower than about 20°. Hold the sextant in line with the pair, meaning diagonal
to the horizon, unless the two happen to be in the same direction. Then treat the lower star (kept in direct view) as a single-point horizon and bring the other
star (reflected view) down to coincide with it. Record the sextant reading, called the sextant distance (Ds).
Then move the micrometer a degree or two to make the next sight independent of the first, and start over for a second or third measurement. Average
the results and note the spread in values. Your test will be no better than this spread in the measurements, since these distances are essentially constant,
even though the star heights are changing. Variation in these numbers probably represents operator errors, because even if the sextant is wrong at this
angle, it is probably wrong by the same amount. To confirm that, check the gear slack using methods of Section 11.8.
(3) If you have a good horizon, also measure the conventional sextant heights of the two stars above the horizon. These need not be precise, and can be
calculated if you don’t have a horizon when doing this on land. Just carry out a routine sight reduction for each star for the time and place of the sights and
get the calculated altitude H1 = Hc1 and H2 = Hc2.
(4) Apply the index correction to the average sextant distance to get the Apparent Distance (Da).
Da = Ds + IC
Then calculate the diagonal refraction (Rd) from:
Rd = 1.90’ × (A - cos D)/sin D,
where
A = 0.5 (sin H1/sin H2) + 0.5 sin H2/sin H1.
Add Rd to Da to get the Observed Distance (Do):
Do = Da + Rd.
(5) Now figure the True Distance (Dt) between the two stars using their sidereal hour angles (SHA) and declinations (dec) found in the Nautical
Almanac. Do a regular sight reduction (by computation or Pub. 229) with these substitutions:
For Dec use Dec1
For LHA use (SHA1 - SHA2)
For Lat use Dec2.
Enter all values accurate to the tenth of a minute. You will get some calculated altitude (Hc) and azimuth (Zn). Forget the Zn, and figure the True
Distance between stars as:
(6) And we are done. Sextant error (at the arc angle equal to the Sextant Distance used) is the difference between the True Distance and the Observed
Distance.
Error = Dt - Do.
This method was used to test and compare four sextants. The results are shown in Figure 11.18-2. To practice with these you need the following star
data from February 6th, 1984:
Figure 11.18-2 Data used in checking three sextants by stellar distances. PST is Pacific Standard Time.
Conclusions
The sextants were chosen at random from new models. Only one of each was tested, so this does not test the consistent quality of many samples of any
one model. The Chinese sextant (A) did measure the proper angles—in fact it did a very good job, although the exact reproducibility shown in the first
sights must be considered accidental. Keep in mind, however, that regardless of the actual magnitude of the errors found, this error for each model has an
inherent uncertainty in it of about 0.5’ due to the method itself and the limited number of sights taken. These star tests also do not test the sun shades,
which might introduce an error of up to 1’ or so into sun sights with the same sextants, especially for plastic sextants with limited quality in the shades.
Furthermore, the error in the index correction itself enters the final answer. For example, sextant (C) was too high by about 1.3’ on each star pair (arc
location). This might reflect my error in measuring the IC, not an error in the sextant itself. Also, the first set of sights using (B) are not consistent with later
ones with the same sextant. They were the first ones done, however, so I suspect this just reflects my getting tuned up to the sight taking. The index error
on the plastic sextant (D) changed during the sights. The last star pair was not measured with (D) since measuring the index error carefully takes time and I
was getting too cold by then to be careful.
Again, it is not likely that a navigator would often have to resort to this type of testing, but it is a good procedure to know about. It also provides a good
backyard exercise for sextant practice—especially if you are looking forward to doing lunars for UTC later on.
Figure 11.19-1 Davis artificial horizon, about 4 inches wide, about $30.
The glass covers on the Davis units (which is the same basic design used since before 1800) are in the form of a tent (two sides at 45°) for two reasons
—I would guess. One is so any reflections from the glass itself are minimized and two, so that the light rays on to and off of the reflecting surface penetrate
the glass at a near perpendicular angle. This is because the glass used is not high quality plate glass (which is much more expensive) and consequently the
two surfaces of the glass pane may not be strictly parallel. A piece of glass with two sides not parallel is by definition a prism, and prisms bend light rays. If
the light rays are bent at all, the measurement will be distorted. (If you have ever seen through glass in an authentically old house, you will see that things
viewed through them are wavy and distorted to some extent.) The Davis units should work fine and are convenient for travel, but it is just as easy to build
one yourself and you could end up with a better product for the job.
The first step in taking the sights is to precompute the altitude of the body you wish to shoot. Even for the sun this could save time, but for stars and
planets it is essentially mandatory. Set the sextant to twice the precomputed value, and then orient yourself so that you can see the image you wish to shoot
on the surface of the liquid through the direct (open glass) side of the horizon mirror. Since you are on firm land, it might be possible to jury-rig some
arrangement for you to lean your arm on for the sights. Explorers often laid or sat on the ground and used their elbows onto knees or ground for support.
When looking to the image on the surface you should see the reflected image in the mirrored side of the sextant as well (if your DR and time used was
close in the precompute). Then for stars or planets, just rotate the drum till the two images coincide, or are precisely beside each other (if you have a side
error in effect). Then read the time and record the Hs.
For sun sights, you can do the same thing, that is overlap the images, and this is actually the easiest way to be sure you have what you want, although
this is not the most precise way to do the sights. At least do it this way once or twice to get underway on the process. When touching limb to limb (the more
precise alternative), it is easy to get confused as which limb is which. The sight reduction procedure in the following section explains this further. You will
need some sun shades for the job, both on horizon and index mirrors or just use one over the roof, or just one over the front of the telescope. Generally you
can get by with the shades on the sextant alone, as if you were doing sights from a glaring sea horizon.
Figure 11.19-4 Geometry of a normal sextant sight, looking toward the horizon.
For doing limb-to-limb, use the lower limb of one image to just touch the upper limb of the other. Then after index correction, half the result will be the
Ha of the upper or lower limb of the true sun according to the limb used as reference on the image reflected from the liquid surface.
It can be tricky to keep track of which limb is which, especially if you rotate one past the other. You have plenty of time, however, so these methods are
learned with practice.
In any view or time of day, the two suns will be either coming together with time if you just watch them both in view, called closing suns, or they will
be separating with time called opening suns. If you keep the suns from crossing over each other, this behavior will reverse from morning (closing suns) to
afternoon (opening suns) as the sun changes from rising to setting. In the morning use the upper limb of the surface reflected sun as your reference. In the
afternoon, the lower limb is used.
When the timed sight is recorded, note upper or lower limb as if it were done with a sea horizon, but use the definitions given earlier. If we do it wrong
it will be apparent in the sight reduction.
For the most accurate sights when you must use a glass roof, you might want to try taking sights again with roof or cover glass turned over so you are
looking at the other side of the glass, and then if the values are different, average them. To see if there is any effect from this you will need to take multiple
sights and study the results. Just turn it over, do not turn and rotate. This is a rather long process for star-sight fixes or sun-moon fixes, because you need
multiple sights from each side which you can plot; so you can choose an effective simultaneous time for each body (Section 11.24). This step would
certainly not be required for practice sights or routine fixes, although since you will want to take multiple sights in any event, you might think ahead to turn
over the glass on alternating sights of a sequence. If it is dead calm at the artificial horizon, you can leave off the roof and this is not an issue.
Figure 11.20-1 Planet magnitudes, i.e., -3.4 for Venus, are on the daily pages; Magnitudes of the navigational stars, i.e., 0.6 for Achernar, are on the Index to Selected Stars (page xxxiii)
shown here. For other stars, see the list of stars in the back of the Almanac.
There is not a simple correspondence between the numerical magnitude of a star and the visual brightness that we perceive. Each magnitude difference
of 1.0 implies a brightness difference of 2.5. The magnitude scale is logarithmic, which means we need special tables, such as Table 11.20-1, to figure the
actual brightness difference between two stars, or between a star and planet. And to complicate things even further, the scale is inverted; the lower the
magnitude, the brighter the star. (The system dates to Ptolemy in about 150 AD, who decided that the brightest stars we see are 100 times brighter than the
faintest we can see, and then choose to divide the range into 5 magnitudes, so we end up with each being a factor of the fifth root of 100 (2.511) brighter
than the next.)
0.0 1.0
0.2 1.2
0.4 1.4
0.6 1.7
0.8 2.1
1.0 2.5
1.2 3.0
1.4 3.6
1.6 4.4
1.8 5.2
2.0 6.3
2.2 7.6
2.4 9.1
2.6 11
2.8 13
3.0 16
3.2 19
3.4 23
3.6 28
3.8 33
4.0 40
4.5 63
5.0 100
5.5 158
6.0 251
6.5 398
The faintest stars we might navigate by would have a magnitude of about 3.0 although it would be rare to use such a faint star. A typical bright star has
magnitude 1.0, which we could say is "two magnitudes brighter" than a faint magnitude-3 star. But the actual brightness difference between the two would
not be a factor of 2.0; the bright one would appear just over 6 times brighter than the faint one.
The magnitude scale can also go negative for very bright objects. Venus, for example, at magnitude -4.0 would be 5.5 magnitudes brighter than a star
with magnitude 1.5. Only two stars, the southern stars Sirius (-1.5) and Canopus (-0.7), are bright enough to have negative magnitudes. Venus and Jupiter
are always negative, meaning always very bright, but Mars and Saturn are only rarely negative.
The sign of the magnitude difference is not important; the object with the lower magnitude is always the brighter object. Remember -1 is less than +1;
and -3 is less than -2, and so forth. Objects with the same magnitude are equally bright—in Table 11.20.-1) this is indicated by showing that a zero
magnitude difference means an object is 1.0 times brighter than another object with the same magnitude.
For all practical star identification it is not necessary to be very technical about brightness and magnitudes. It is sufficient to classify stars in three rough
categories: Magnitude-1 stars, being the 20 or so brightest ones—pick a favorite and use it as your standard. Magnitude-2 stars are stars about as bright as
the Big Dipper stars. There are only about 70 of these, each two to three times fainter than magnitude-one stars. And finally the Magnitude-3 stars like
Pherkad, which is the lesser of the two Guards on the cup edge of the Little Dipper. Kochab, nearest the Pole is a magnitude-2 star; Pherkad below it is a
perfect 3.0 magnitude-3 star. The two trailing stars of Cassiopeia, Ruchbah (2.65) and Segin (3.35), are both magnitude-3 stars. There are only about 200 of
these in all of the sky. The vast majority of celestial navigation is done with magnitude-1 stars, and magnitude-3 stars are hardly ever used.
Tip on star ID
It is rare to see stars 10º or lower (a hand width) on the horizon, because there we view them through the thickest layer of the earth’s atmosphere, where
much of their light intensity is lost to scattering. Even the brightest stars fade as they descend toward the horizon, as shown in Fig. 11.20-2. Consequently,
if you see an isolated star low on the horizon, you can bet it is a bright one, even if it appears faint. Since bright stars are well known stars, this observation
alone often identifies the star for you.
Figure 11.20-2 How star brightness changes with the height of the star. All stars fade as they descend toward the horizon because more of their light is lost to scattering. Polaris, for
example, can rarely be seen at latitudes lower than about 10 to maybe 5º N.
Or, an isolated low “star” could be Venus or Jupiter. But this confusion is unlikely since navigators tend to keep pretty close track of where these guys
are, and even low on the horizon they remain notably bright. On a clear night, a low, bright Venus can startle a weary helmsman who sees it for the first
time.
For more sophisticated star ID, it helps to know that several stars are distinctly reddish. These are in a class of stars called the Red Giants, and knowing
these can be a valuable aid to their identification. See The Star Finder Book for more details on star and planet ID.
Procedure
(1) Do the necessary sights or chart work to establish your position, and from an ocean chart (paper or electronic) determine the local magnetic
variation (Var).
(2) Choose and identify a celestial body that lies near dead ahead on your intended course. Head directly toward it and note the compass course (C) and
the UTC at this time.
(3) Then do a normal sight reduction of the object using the UTC and DR position at the time the compass heading (C) was recorded. Disregard the
calculated altitude (Hc) obtained but record the azimuth of the body (Zn). This azimuth was the object’s true bearing (ZnT) at the time (ZnT = Zn). Figure
the magnetic bearing of the object from: ZnM = ZnT - Var(East) or ZnM = ZnT + Var(West).
(4) Compass error (deviation) on heading C is then the difference between C and ZnM. The compass should have read ZnM when headed toward the
object. Remember, however, that this only checks the compass on heading C. A compass might have no error on heading C, but still significant error on
headings just about 30° or so to either side of C. When in doubt check the compass on several headings across the quadrant of your desired course.
Figure 11.22-1 Comparison of a great circle chart (top, called here gnomonic) compared to the same route transferred point by point to a Mercator chart. This is the main purpose of a
Great Circle Chart, also called Tracking Chart. Bearings and distances cannot be read directly from gnomonic charts. Image from Bowditch.
Furthermore, the difference in distance between GC and RL routes between two points is only significant when both departure and arrival are at high
latitudes and the distance is about 2,000 miles or more. But there are times we still care to know at least the initial heading of the GC route so we can
evaluate our present progress. Note that we refer to initial heading on a GC route. On a RL route, the true heading is constant all along the route, but in
great circle sailing the route heading is continually changing, always starting out poleward of the RL.
For example, on the route from Cape Flattery, WA (48º 24’N, 124º 45’W) to Maui, HI (21º 10’N, 156º 25’W) the difference in RL versus GC distance
is only 14 miles, but the difference in initial heading is 11º (GC = 234T, RL = 223T). Thus, if you are in wind conditions that do not let you sail the RL
route as you might want to (which might not be best choice anyway), we then have to look at what course we can make good. If we are making good a
course about 10º to 15º higher (poleward) of the RL, we are not actually losing ground at all. In fact, we are getting closer to Maui on every mile than we
would be sailing the same mile on the RL route. On the other hand, if we are forced south of the RL, we are losing miles compared to both the GC route
and the RL route. On this particular sailing route, on the other hand, that might still be the way we would choose to go, but that is not the topic at hand.
From a tactical point of view, even if we wanted to get south fast, we might still prefer going on the GC route for a day or so, since every mile sailed
due south is not getting us much closer to HI—again, however, not the topic at hand, but just to point out that in ocean sailing, it is not often the geometric
route that dominates our choice of course. The guy on the GC route looking very good the first few days, better get south pretty soon or he risks sailing into
the pacific High and not be able to get out of it, etc.
In any event, it can pay to calculate and keep in mind the difference between GC and RL headings, even if we do not care much about the few miles we
might save on the GC route.
The best practical solution to figuring the GC route is just type the Lat-Lon of your departure and destination into an electronic charting system (ECS)
or a computer or calculator program and push the button for GC route. You get all you need instantly. See starpath.com/calc for an online solution. The
basic results are the distance between the two points and the initial heading of the route. Just be careful when using ECS that you are set to get GC data and
not RL between two points. Usually that is the case, but some systems offer an option.
You can also get the answer from a GPS unit, which in one sense will be more accurate. They know what chart datum you have selected, and so they
tell you the ellipsoidal distance, which takes into account the shape of the earth. GC sailing by definition is spherical earth, just like cel nav is. I believe all
ECS programs use spherical earth solutions, so you might see slight differences between a GPS solution and an ECS solution—a mile or two out of a
couple thousand.
In GC sailing the heading changes continuously along the route with the initial heading poleward of the RL. If you plot out the GC route on a Mercator
chart, once you get beyond the halfway point on that initial route track, the GC heading will be on the other side of the RL, but if you recompute the GC
route from a new position, it will again start poleward, but maybe an indistinguishable amount.
Thus, to layout a GC route we need waypoints along the route to navigate the changing heading. This is usually accomplished in navigation programs
by telling them a Lon interval, and then the program tells you the Lat at each of these Lon intervals along the route—in other words, a set of waypoints.
The solution is to break the CG route into a series of RL routes.
Another parameter often provided by computed solutions is the vertex of the route, which is the Lat-Lon of the highest Lat along the route. Since the
GC route only differs notably from the RL route for high Lat at departure and destination, we often learn that the vertex hits the ice, so we can’t use this
route anyway!
If you do not have an ECS program, or a GPS, or a navigation program in a computer or mobile app—essentially a big mistake when it comes to
shaping a course!—you have several other ways to determine a GC route.
Figure 11.22-2 Correction to Pub. 229 or NAO Table solutions to GC distance by plotting.
Procedure:
(1) First look at the scale needed to include both AP and departure, and make a universal plotting sheet as large as possible to include both. Here we use 30' per standard parallel. Note
that this changes the Lon scale as well.
(2) Plot both AP and departure points.
(3) Draw a line in the initial GC heading from both positions.
(4) Draw a line from the AP to intersect the heading line from the departure point at a right angle.
(5) Read the correction, which is the distance between that line and the AP, which is 3.0 nmi in this example. The correction can be plus or minus, and could be up to 20 nmi or so.
The NAO Sight Reduction Tables included in every Nautical Almanac can also do this job very nicely, and the precision will always be adequate. The
NAO tables for the last example given Hc = 52º 54' with Zn = 235.7. The correction of Figure 11.22-2 is still required.
Summary
Besides keeping in mind at all times the direction of the shortest route, even if we can't sail it, the call for GC computations comes up in yacht racing
every day, as we need to compute who is ahead at each daily report and you get that from the difference in the GC distance to the mark between you and
your competitors. For this application, a computed solution is mandatory.
For completion, the GC charts readily available are NGA No. 5274 North Atlantic and No. 5270 North Pacific. They are available from print-on-
demand chart outlets; these are the ones that are available in the USCG exam room. These particular charts, however, do not include instructions or
diagrams for reading distances and bearings, so they can only be used for transferring a GC route to a Mercator chart.
Alert to Reader!
Before proceeding, please note that computing RL sailing must be considered an advanced or specialized part of navigation training. This is true for
two reasons. First, most calls for this underway or in planning can be done by plotting right on the chart, and second, if we are to use this formalism in the
practical world, we should have a calculator or mobile app programmed for instant solutions. We include this here because USCG tests require this
knowledge (without programmed devices) and we do work on the premise that we should be prepared to do anything we need on our own—assuming here
that “on our own” includes using a trig calculator! We would also like to present our procedures for this, which differ in some important details from
standard treatments.
Mid-latitude DR
Both RL sailing solutions used the same definitions as shown in Figure 11.23-1, because both are going to be straight lines on a Mercator chart.
Furthermore, the latitude interval for a given run along a course will be the same for each solution. It is just how they compute the longitude interval over
this run that changes.
Figure 11.23-1 Rhumb line sailing terms.
First, we look at doing DR by mid-latitude sailing. That is, leaving from a Lat 1, Lon 1 and sailing for a distance D along course C, what is then your
new Lat 2, Lon 2?
The definitions are illustrated in Figure 11.23-1. The first step in any sailing computation is to draw a small sketch that orients you for the solution. The
importance of this step cannot be overstressed. In most cases we are computing intervals, and you must use your sketch to decide if the Lat and Lon are
getting bigger or smaller based on the course direction.
Figure 11.23-2 How the angle α (called course angle) is used to determine the course direction.
Definitions:
D = distance run
C = true course
α = course angle
l = Lat interval in nmi
dLat = Lat interval in degrees and minutes
p = departure = Lon interval in nmi
dLon = Lon interval in degrees and minutes
From trig we can compute the two sides of the right triangle:
l = D × cos C
p = D × sin C.
Since the latitude scale is the miles scale, we get directly
dLat = l = D × cos C.
Now we define the mid-latitude:
Lm = (Lat 1 + Lat 2)/2
Then we make the assumption that the meridians of longitude are getting closer as we leave the equator in proportion to the cos of the latitude, and
choose the midpoint between the first and second positions to use for this.
dLon = p/cos Lm
Then having computed the two angular intervals we can find the new values.
Lat 2 = Lat 1 + dLat
Lon 2 = Lon 1 + dLon
Note: Crossing the equator dLat = Lat 1+Lat 2. Crossing Greenwich, dLon = Lon 1+Lon 2, and crossing the Date Line, dLon = 360 - (Lon 1+Lon 2). This
question should not be asked for distances much larger than 500 nmi outside of the tropics as the method becomes less accurate.
Mid-Latitude Route
Now we look at the same solution applied to route planning. That is, given starting point (Lat 1, Lon 1) and destination (Lat 2, Lon 2) ,what is the
distance between them and the course between them?
The procedure is to find l and p, and then find C from
C = (N,S) αº (E,W),
where
α = arctan (p/ l).
p = dLon × cos Lm
l = dLat
Then we can find D from Pythagorean Theorem:
D2 = l2 + p2
D = sqrt(l2 + p2).
Mid-Latitude Examples
Here are two questions from a USCG licence exam.
DR by mid-latitude
Example 1: A vessel steams 720 miles on course 058°T from LAT 30°06.0’S, LONG 31°42.0’E. What are the latitude and longitude of the point of arrival
by mid-latitude sailing?
Solution: Make a rough sketch (Figure 11.23-3) for orientation and to ID dLat, dLon, course, distance run, and departure.
Figure 11.23-3 Example 1 sketch to determine if dLat and dLon are plus or minus.
Mercator Sailing
The Mercator sailing solution is a more accurate representation of a RL on a Mercator chart than mid-latitude sailing, especially for longer distances at
higher latitudes. This is achieved by using directly the data that define the Mercator chart, namely the Meridonal Parts. The meridonal part (M) for a given
latitude is the distance along a meridian from that latitude to the equator on a Mercator chart, expressed in minutes of longitude at the equator. This is just
the data needed to construct an accurate Mercator chart to match a specific chart datum, usually WGS-84.
In mid-latitude sailing we just assumed there is 1 nmi per 1’ of lat, which is no longer true on a non-spherical earth, and we approximated the distance
between them (the departure) with the cos (Lat). Thus, we no longer use l and p to find the course angle, but now use the difference between the meridonal
parts (m) and dLon directly. A key to remembering the new equations is the fact that m has units of longitude minutes.
We still need to make the sketch to figure the course angle (α) and the directions for Lat and Lon increments.
Mercator Route
For a Mercator route between two positions, use:
α = arctan (dLon/m),
where m = M1 ± M2. This difference in meridonal parts is - when both positions are on the same side of the equator, but + when the route crosses the
equator.
C = (N,S) α (E,W),
D = dLat/cos C,
The M values for Lat 1 and Lat 2 can be looked up in Table 6 of Bowditch (Figure 11.23-5, available online and always in the USCG test room), which
lists them for every 1’ of Lat, or compute directly from:
Figure 11.23-5 Sample of Bowditch Table 6, Meridonal Parts. At Lat 42º 6’ , N or S, M = 2774.3. Interpolate as needed for decimal minutes of Lat.
M(Lat) = 7915.704468 × log [tan (45º + Lat/2)] - 23.0133633 × sin (Lat) -0.051353 × sin 3 (Lat) - 0.000206 × sin5 (Lat).
This equation is added for completeness or for your own programming. We would not be expected to memorize this.
Mercator DR
DR by Mercator sailing uses the same equations from a different approach. Here we are given C and D, Lat 1, Lon 1, and we need to compute dLat and
dLon to find the second position. Thus:
dLat = D × cos C;
Lat 2 = Lat 1 ± dLat.
Look up M1 and M2 to find m = M1 ± M2.
Look at your sketch to figure α from C, then
dLon = m × tan α.
Lon 2 = Lon 1 ± dLon.
Summary
If you have read all the way to here, then I do not really need to say this, but if you are doing ocean sailing you need a convenient computed solution for
your sailings. We do, indeed, have frequent use for them; after every fix we need to consider the best route to either an active waypoint or to the
destination. And the planning of any voyage starts out with laying out the routes and figuring distances and estimated travel times.
Next we would choose the brightest bodies to fill the triad, if we have a choice without sacrificing bearings, simply because they are easier to see when
the horizon is still sharp. Next if we have the choice, again without sacrificing bearing quality, we would choose stars at about the same height. This would
tend to minimize differences in refraction among them, and refraction is usually the main uncertainty in many sights. This is why we always choose sights
above about 15º whenever possible. Likewise, for routine work we would avoid sights above some 75º when possible. Very high sights are more difficult to
take accurately because when getting close to overhead we do not know which way to look when we rock the sextant.
Very high sights also cannot be reduced in the normal manner, because the approximation of the circle of position as a short line segment is no longer
valid (Section 10.6). For these sights we need to plot the actual circle of position on the chart as a circle of radius equal to the zenith distance, centered at
the GP.
For the more general case of a set of three sights, at separations that are not exactly 120º apart, with a constant error among them, along with potentially
different random uncertainties on each body (i.e., horizon better in one direction than another or one star notably fainter or lower than the others), we have
a mathematical solution for the most likely position in Section 11.32—although most navigators would tend to choose some centroid location within the
cocked hat, and just increase the assigned fix uncertainty to account for all of the intersections.
Figure 11.24-2 Crucial lengths defined. If any of these are approaching 60 nmi long, we should use the fix for a new DR and redo the sight reduction.
We might consider that any crucial line in our plotted fix that is over (or approaching) 60 nmi should be considered too long for best results, meaning
they may violate our basic assumptions in the plotting. Underlying the manual plotting solution is the assumption that the LOP itself is a valid straight-line
approximation to a segment of a circle of equal altitude (see Section 10.6), and we assume that the azimuth line is a segment of a great circle, even though
we are plotting it as a straight rhumb line. These approximations can break down when the lines get too long. The consequences of this also depends on the
direction they are oriented, but a generic filter on the lengths should catch all cases.
The solution to long lines on the plot, is to plot the fix in the normal way, then read that Lat and Lon and call that the new DR for these sights. Then do
the sight reduction again using this DR, which will call for new APs, and then the lines will all be shorter, and the fix you get will be more accurate.
In most cases of routine cel nav—see Hawaii by Sextant for examples—we can proceed as normal, and will not find any excessively long lines, but if
we do, we can fix it. On the other hand, if we suspect ahead of time that our DR could be wrong by over 40 miles or so, then we might do a quick 2-LOP
fix to check the lines and find a new best DR to use before any further analysis.
The instructions to Pub 229 include a Table of Offsets for curving the LOPs to help with this correction. That table shows corrections of several miles
for lines L1 or L2 of just 45 miles. Errors due to long a-values are more subtle and depend on the azimuths; they occur when a straight line approximation
to the azimuth line diverges from the curved great circle track between AP and GP.
In summary, any of the crucial lines in a fix plot approaching 60 nmi long should call for getting a new DR from the fix and redoing the sight reduction.
Errors of several miles can occur without this precaution. Such errors are larger for high sights, above 70º or so, and line lengths can get enhanced when
DR Lat is about halfway between two parallels. See starpath.com/celnavbook for more.
Evaluating a Sight Sequence
Before we can plot the LOPs, however, we need some way to evaluate each set of sights of an individual body. In other words, we are taking say five
sights of one star, and we want to somehow average these into just one sight to take advantage of the statistic nature of measurements.
The problem is not a trivial one, because the sextant height itself is changing with time; so we naturally expect each one to be different from the last
one. Looking to the east, the sight angle will be getting bigger with time as the body rises, and looking west they will get smaller as the body sets.
Measuring a sextant altitude for a fix is not like measuring your pulse rate, which you can just do many times in a row and then perform a simple average to
get an accurate value. We must evaluate a sequence of sights and use their relative values to determine if individual ones might be in doubt. Furthermore,
we are moving while we take the sights, so even if the stars did not rise and set, their heights in our sextant would change because we are changing
positions.
A set of sample data taken on land is shown below. This shows clearly that you can practice this important method even at a lake shore, but when
underway we have to account for our motion in the process.
DR 47° 38’ N, 122° 20’W (Gasworks Park on Lake Union in Seattle, where we once did student practice sights), ZD=+8h, WE = 7s fast, HE = 7 ft. IC
= 3.5’ off the scale. Sights of the sun’s lower limb. Note that we must use dip short for the ultimate evaluation of these sights, but that is not the issue at
hand.
WT Hs
14h 43m 11s 27° 42.3’
14h 45m 46s 27° 29.0’
14h 47m 53s 27° 12.0’
14h 49m 23s 27° 02.5’
This data is plotted in Figure 11.24-3
Figure 11.24-3 Sextant height plotted versus time. It appears that the second sight is inconsistent with the other three.
Fit-Slope Method
The trick is simple. We fine tune the line we are fitting to. In the last example, we simply took the best line that fit the most data points and drew it. It
could have been any line, meaning in this case a line with any slope to it. But the trick is that we know the slope. This does not have to be a free ranging
option in selecting the best line. We can calculate the proper slope and then just slide that line up and down the page for the best fit to the data. Once we
have that line in place, we have firmer ground to stand on as we pitch out some of our sights.
To calculate the slope, we do a sight reduction at some time near the beginning of the sight session to get Hc and Zn (we do not need the latter) and
then do the same thing at some time near the end of the sight session. In the previous example, we chose to do the computation at 14h 44m 00s to get Hc =
26° 3.3’, and then again at 14h 48m 00s to get Hc = 25° 35.7’. This tells us that the sun at this time and place was setting at a rate of 63.3-35.7 = 27.6’ per 4
minutes of time.
We can now draw in that line on the same plot with the data and then use parallel rules or plotter to move it up to fit the data (Figure 11.24-4). Just slide
this line up and down to get the best fit position. There is no rotating it now for the best fit. We know that all good sights will be rising or falling at this rate.
To draw the line, just choose any convenient place on the 1444 line to mark the first Hc then at 1448 mark another Hc that is 28’ lower. Note that actual
values of Hc used here do not matter so long as they are plotted on the right times and are 28’ apart.
If we are computing Hc, it is trivial to do these two sight reductions; it takes just a minute or two. But if we are using tables, we must do one more trick
to make it work. We can’t just choose two arbitrary times, since we won’t be able to get a whole-degrees value of LHA for use in the tables. So we simply
do it once properly from a time early in the sights or just before it (in this case 1444), and then get Hc from that, and then look up the Hc for the same
declination and latitude but for an LHA which is 1° higher. This will give the Hc for 4 minutes later (1448). You can then use these two values to figure the
slope. If the d-value in the sight reduction tables is the same at both LHAs, then you do not even need to figure the d-correction, since that will not change
the slope. Using Pub. 249 for the above calculations, you get Hc at 1444 (Lat = 48° N, Dec = S 6°, LHA = 38°) = 26° 32’ and at 1448 (Lat = 48° N, Dec =
S 6°, LHA = 39°) = 26° 04’, which gives the same 28’ per 4 minutes slope that we got by computer.
Figure 11.24-4 shows this result applied to the sight data at hand. Note the interesting result that poor old Sight No.2 that we were so ready to throw out
was probably quite OK. The problem sight was No. 1, which looks off by more than 4’ or so! That is one we can effectively throw out by simply ignoring
it. What we want now as a best estimate of the full set is any point on the best fit line, and generally we do that by just choosing a sight that is on the line.
Thus we end up with just one sight, but this process has effectively averaged the others to let us know this one is a good representation of the lot.
Figure 11.24-4 Same data as Figure 11.24-3 with the calculated slope plotted. Forcing the fit line to the proper slope we see that it was not the second sight that was wrong, but the first
one.
It’s too late to say “in short,” but at least in summary, this is a good trick to know for evaluating sextant sights. It is especially valuable on those days
when the electronics have failed completely and the sky has been overcast for some days and you are anxious for at least a good LOP, and all you get is
three hurried sights in broken cloud cover and choppy seas, and you have to make the best of these. Once the data are analyzed in this manner, we then just
select one sight from the good data line and sight reduce it. In this example, we could use the last sight, right on the line, or we could use sight No 2 and
take 1’ off the value (it was not way out of line at all!), or sight No. 3 and add 1’ or use the purely fictitious sight at 47:02 with an Hs of 27° 19.0’. We did
not actually measure a height at this last time, but if we had, that is most likely what we would have gotten. Any one of these sights is a proper average of
the full set of four, but it took the full set of four, and some reasoning, to pick it out.
Remember when you are underway, the two sight reductions for the slope will be from different DR positions to account for the slope you expect to see
when moving. In contrast to just averaging the a-values (when all sights must be advanced to a single time), in the fit-slope method you do not advance the
sights because the predicted slope from the two DRs is what you would expect to see when moving between these two positions. Later when you have
found the best line from a sequence at a specific time, and then also another best line from another body at a specific time, these two (or more) lines will
need to be advanced to a common time for the final fix.
This trick can be used for standard sun line running fixes or for a star series if you do not plan to use the fit-slope method. It is especially valuable if
you are computing your solutions but your program does not do the running fixes automatically, which is the case with many of the packaged cel nav
programs.
In this case, you just make a list of the times, a-values and Zns, compute the distance run from the base time you are using as the DR for the
computations, and then correct each one, see if any really stands out as likely wrong, and then average the rest. As noted earlier, you might miss the outliers
this way, compared to a full fit-slope analysis, but most of the time this will be fine. For this procedure it is usually best to choose the DR to be at the time
of the last fix, then the individual run distances are quicker to calculate.
We have even seen cases, where a plot of Hs versus WT for the raw data seemed to imply one sight was wrong, but when advancing all to the same
time, we learned that it was in fact another that was off—similar to what we saw with the fit-slope example.
You can also use this method to advance the three best sights from a fit-slope solution to a common time.
A good way to see these special analyses techniques in action is our new book Hawaii by Sextant (Starpath Publications, 2015). It includes some 250
sights making up 27 fixes, many of which use these methods. It uses real data from a 1982 voyage that used nothing but cel nav for an ocean passage.
Samples of fixes from that book using the methods of this section are in Figure 11.28-1.
Figure 11.25-1 2102-D Star Finder and book on how to use it.
This device is a powerful navigation aid that can be used for much more than just star ID, including selecting the best star-planet sight options,
predicting rise and set times, choosing optimum sun-moon sight times, and more. Because of its value to navigators, we have a short book devoted to how
to use it: The Star Finder Book: A Complete Guide to the Many Uses of the 2102-D Star Finder (Starpath Publications, 2008). Please refer to that book for
the details.
These days there are numerous mobile apps that will also identify celestial bodies, often by just pointing the phone at the unknown body. The phone has
a compass in it so it knows which way you are looking; it has an inclinometer in it so it knows the height above the horizon; it has a clock in it so it knows
what time it is; and it has a GPS in it so it knows where you are. Needless to say, all of the sensors have to be calibrated, but when that is done, these work
remarkably well. These astro apps were one of the first hot apps for the phones. They are more sophisticated than the 2102-D—until they get wet, get
dropped, or run out of power, which is when we start looking for that bag of essentially indestructible plastic disks.
Thus during routine sights, if we get caught having to take a sight of an unknown body, the only thing extra we have to do is take an approximate
bearing to the body. Then with the precise time and Hs of the sight, along with its approximate Zn (measured with a compass and corrected for variation),
we can easily figure out what the body was. The bearing taken does not have to be precise. I recall once just pointing to a star and asking the helmsman
which way I was pointing, and that was good enough.
Figure 11.25-2 Pointing stars of the northern sky. Each set points to Polaris at the end of the handle of the Little Dipper (Ursa Minor); in each case, the distance to Polaris is approximately
five times the pointer spacing. In the Big Dipper (Ursa Major), the pointers are the leading stars. In this group, the cup leads and the handle trails. Auriga is a prominent pentagon, led by the
bright star Capella and a small group of faint stars called the Kids. Its pointers are the trailing two stars of the pentagon. The Great Square of Pegasus is led by a small triangle of stars, with
the handle of a “Giant Dipper” trailing behind. Deneb, at the head of the Northern Cross (Cygnus), together with Vega and Altair make up a prominent right triangle (the Summer Triangle)
which is led across the sky by the brilliant Vega at the right angle. Note that in each of these groups, the pointers are either the leading or trailing stars. Polaris is always located at an
angular height above the horizon equal to your latitude. Adapted from the book Emergency Navigation (McGraw-Hill 2008).
To help remember the orientation and relative locations of the stars, we can imagine figures in the sky, just as stargazers have done since the beginning
of time. The stars all move along predictable paths; so once a particular group is chosen, it pays to memorize which stars or parts of the group are leading
and which are trailing as they proceed across the sky. One way is to think of the group as a vessel, and memorize which parts are the bow and which parts
are the stern. Then each group becomes a boat sailing counterclockwise around Polaris, located at the hub on the northern sky. Due north on the horizon is
directly below this point. With a sky full of boats all sailing in a circle around the North Pole it is easy to keep track of the north. Even if you only see one
boat you know north is on her port beam. By knowing how far the pole is off the beam of that boat relative to star spacing within the group north can be
found more precisely from that group alone.
This description of the philosophy applies best when looking toward the northern sky. A similar model works looking south toward the southern stars
sailing the opposite direction around the South Pole of the sky (Figure 11.25-3). Looking east or west, the philosophy can be thought of another way. We
know that stars rise from the eastern horizon and set on the western horizon. Consequently, if we know which side of the horizon is west, we can tell which
direction stars are headed for. To steer by the stars, use the same approach in reverse: learn which way the stars are moving (by knowing the bows and
sterns of various groups), and from this figure out where west is.
Figure 11.25-3 The apparent paths of stars around the elevated pole. Each star circles the pole once every 24 hours. Stars that never rise or set as they circle are called circumpolar stars;
they remain in view all night long, every night of the year.
With this picture in mind and a broad view of the horizon you can end up steering by the “shape of the sky” as a whole rather than relying on individual
stars or groups of stars. Some form of this method was probably used by early seafaring cultures that traveled long distances without compasses. Arabian,
Scandinavian, and Polynesian methods are the best documented and the only ones that are to some extent still practiced today. I have found only indirect
references to this type of philosophy in the literature, but it is easy to imagine how early navigators made up pictures of the sky for this purpose. People or
animals chasing each other across the sky would do as well as boats, and they might be easier to build stories around so that the pictures could be passed on
without written records.
Even with this guiding philosophy, however, more specific tricks for individual star groups are often helpful in finding precise directions. Polynesian
navigators had many such tricks but in most cases these worked only in the latitudes of their islands, and most were incorporated into routes from one
island to another rather than being general ways to find directions. For general use we need more general tricks. Again, we are free to make these up to suit
our needs. Figure 11.25-2 illustrates one approach that covers most of the northern sky. These are just one set of tricks; the same stars can be regrouped and
used in different ways to find directions.
The methods shown in Figure 11.25-2 use pointing stars to locate the position of Polaris, since it is this position that is needed to locate north and not
the star itself. North can be found with any of these pointing stars nearly as well as it can be with Polaris itself, and at least one set of these pointers is likely
to be visible when Polaris is obscured by haze, clouds, or hills. Figure 11.25-2 illustrates the use of pointers to find due north on the horizon.
The pointers in Figure 11.25-2 are each chosen to have a distance to Polaris of five times the pointer spacing. To remember the factor: you point with
your finger, each hand has five fingers. The (±) labels indicate distances slightly larger or smaller than exactly five.
Mintaka
The leading star of Orion’s belt (the three close stars, evenly-spaced, at the center of the figure) is the special one for star steering (Figure 11.25-4). The
name of this special star is Mintaka, and, setting aside small differences, it is special because it is neither a southern star nor a northern star, as it straddles
the celestial equator (halfway between the South Pole and the North Pole), circling the earth daily directly above the earth’s equator. And just as the sun
does on the equinoxes—when it happens to be directly over the equator—Mintaka always rises due east and sets due west, from wherever and whenever it
is sighted. Unlike the sun, however, which spends only a few days each year over the equator, Mintaka lives there permanently. Any time you happen to
see Orion’s Belt on the horizon (in Canada or Australia), it is just as good as a big letter “E” marking due east when rising, or a big letter “W” marking due
west when setting.
Even more important, however, we need not see Mintaka just as it crosses the horizon in order to use it for accurate bearings. By knowing the angle that
stars rise and set, we can project the star forward (when setting) or backward (when rising) to locate where it actually will or did cross the horizon. The
proper angle to use is 90° minus your latitude, as illustrated in Figure 11.25-4. In Hawaii or Rio de Janerio, at latitudes of about 20° (north or south does
not matter here), eastern stars rise steeply at 70°; whereas at high latitudes such as Anchorage or Tierra del Fuego at latitudes of about 60°, eastern or
western stars rise and set gently at only 30°. To do this pointing to the horizon, the rising or setting angle must be estimated by eye, but the angle need not
be precise to get a good indication of east or west (see Figure 11.25-4). Near the equator, Mintaka bearings are especially easy, and they are useful at any
time. Near the equator, stars rise straight up from the horizon (90° - 0°), so viewed from anywhere near the equator, Mintaka not only rises due east but it
remains due east throughout the night until it passes over head, after which it remains due west until it sets.
Figure 11.25-4 Orion on the horizon. From any point on earth, at any time of night, Orion’s belt always rises due east and sets due west. The Seven Sisters, Pleiades, lead the chase of
nearby stars. Taurus the Bull follows, fighting off Orion whose faithful hunting dogs, Sirius and Procyon. trail close behind. Betelgeuse, at the base of Orion’s raised arm, and Aldebaran, at
the eye of the Bull, are brilliant red giant stars. Mintaka is the leading star of the belt, closest to the horizon.
Other tricks can be developed from special stars at certain latitudes. Some work in only special cases, such as high in the sky or low on the horizon, but
the practice of creating and testing them is both functional and instructive. For more information on navigation in general without conventional
instruments, please see Emergency Navigation.
For an informative and enjoyable treatment of the stars and constellations with excellent star maps see North Star to Southern Cross by Will Kyselka
and Ray Lanterman. Another pleasant introduction to the stars is by H.A. Rey, called The Stars: A New Way to See Them.
Figure 11.25-5 Big Dipper star clock as it would appear reading 0830 hours
When the clock hand points straight up from the horizon, the clock reads midnight; when the hands point east with the pointers lying parallel to the
horizon, the clock reads 1800, and so forth. To read the clock at any time of the night, estimate the hour and fraction of an hour from the relative orientation
of the pointers on the imaginary clock face. That’s all there would be to it if the sun kept pace with the stars. But the sun does not keep pace with the stars,
and our daily timekeeping is based on the sun so we must make a correction for this.
All star clocks are fast; they gain 4 minutes every day, because we keep track of time relative to the location of the sun, and we are moving around the
sun relative to the stars at a rate of about 1º per day (360º/365d). Thus, when we make our daily 24-hour rotation from noon to noon (relative to the sun),
we are then 1º farther along our orbit; so we have passed any stars overhead by 1º. At our daily rotation rate of 360º/24 hours, this 1º is equivalent to 4
minutes.
If you look at the same star on successive nights at the same time, it will be 1º farther (more westward) along its path across the sky. Thus, if you want
to see it at the same place on successive nights, you have to look 4 minutes earlier. This is basically how new stars appear on the eastern horizon at sunset
as the seasons progress—although that is a bit more complicated because the time of sunrise is also changing. (We learn star positions relative to Aries, so
check out the value of GHA Aries on successive days at the same time and you will see that it increases by about 1º.)
At a gain of 4 minutes per day, star clocks gain a whole day in 1 year; so all star clocks reset themselves on a particular date that depends on the
particular star clock in use—and by star clock we mean any two stars with the same SHA so that the line between them rotates around the pole. The Big
Dipper star clock resets itself on March 8th so all corrections must be reckoned from that date. (Official scientific star time used by astronomers resets on
the Vernal Equinox, March 21st; the shift to March 8th comes about because scientific star time does not use the Big Dipper pointers for a reference line.)
To tell time from the Big Dipper, we need to know how many days have passed since March 8th. The time we read directly from the star clock is then
fast by 4 minutes for each of these days. As an example, suppose the date was September 22nd and the stars looked as they do in Figure 11.25-5, with the
star clock reading 0830. September 22nd is 198 days past March 8th, so the clock is fast by 198 × 4 minutes, which equals 792 minutes, or 13 hours and 12
minutes. The first 12 hours of the correction just switches the time from AM to PM, so the correct time of night is 2030 - 0112, which equals 1918, or 7:18
PM local time.
Figuring the correction is a bit involved, but this preparation need only be done once, after which the results can be rearranged to be more convenient.
On September 22nd, for example, you could make an equivalent new rule for reading this star clock: change the star clock time from AM to PM (or vice
versa, later in the night) and then subtract 1 hour and 12 minutes. Each subsequent night, you would subtract an extra 4 minutes, because the clock is still
gaining time each night.
The time you figure from the corrected star clock will be the proper standard time for your time zone to within, at worst, about 30 minutes. It would be
exact only if you happened to be located right in the middle of a time zone, each of which is about 1 hour wide according to star time. Star clocks also do
not know about daylight saving time, so when daylight saving time is in effect, you must add 1 hour to the final result. Corrections for both longitude (the
time zone correction) and for daylight saving time can be made simultaneously if you calibrate the star clock with a known time. In the last example, if the
uncorrected star clock read 0830 at a time you knew was 8:10 AM Pacific Daylight Time, the rule becomes much simpler: subtract 20 minutes tonight, and
then 4 minutes less each subsequent night.
The final accuracy of the time obviously depends on how accurately the star clock itself is read, which requires an estimate of the angle between the
clock hand and the horizon—similar to reading a stylish watch with no numbers on the dial. Sticks held in one line with the Pointers and one with the
horizon can help with this. The angle found this way can then be transferred to a sketch of the clock or to the compass rose of a chart. Reading the clock by
eye alone, however, is usually adequate. Note that in normal circumstances most people have an adequate sense of time even without a watch, but under a
great deal of stress this is not the case at all. During long storms at sea, it is possible to even lose track of how many days have passed. This is not likely to
happen in a routine cruising, but one could imagine getting caught in coastal waters at night without a safe harbor nearby. If the wind and seas began to
build on top of this, one could easily muster enough stress to lose track of time. Without a watch, you could monitor the duration of the adventure with the
stars.
(Note: A star clock resets when the common SHA of the two stars making up the clock hand leads to GHA = 0º 0' at 00 UTC. For the Big Dipper clock,
Dubhe and Merak have SHA = 194º 4.2' ±14.3', so recalling that GHA * = GHA Aries + SHA *, we need the nearest date when GHA Aries = 360º - 194º
4.2' = 165º 55.8' at 00 UTC. You can get a rough estimate from the Planet Diagram, or interpolate the Almanac to find that this is March 8.)
Stargazing for orientation in time and space clearly requires some hands-on practice. It is not like learning the combination to a lock, that once
memorized can be opened at will. It is more like learning to play a kazoo. You start by learning to play a few notes well, and pretty soon you are playing a
fine tune. And the enjoyment to be had from exercising this skill can be just as rewarding. It is one way to get in a little more in tune with a dependable part
of the environment.
Lunars
If you have lost accurate time but still have all of your other equipment and books, you can find the time with the 18th century technique of lunar
distance. This method relies on the fact that the moon moves rapidly enough through the stars that by careful measurement of its location relative to a star
or planet along its path compared to the computed location of the moon from the Nautical Almanac, we can deduce the time of our measurement. The
technique is relatively straight forward but tedious if the solution is to be made by tables alone, which is the only practical application in that with a
computer or mobile app running we likely have other options for navigation.
The primary reference for lunars is The Stark Tables for Clearing the Lunar Distance and Finding Universal Time from Sextant Observation (Starpath
Publications, 2010). With careful sights, a practiced user can routinely find the correct time to within about ± 30s and sometimes better. See
http://davidburchnavigation.blogspot.com/2014/06/finding-longitude-by-lunar-distance.html for related discussion and links.
Lunar Altitudes
Without the special publications and measurements of a traditional lunar measurement, we can also find UTC from the moon in special circumstances,
namely whenever we have a moon bearing roughly east or west at twilight.
To do this take a series of careful sights of two stars and the moon, rotating through them several times. Then use the Automatic Running Fix method of
Section 11.24 to find the best average values of the three sights at one specific time on the watch whose error you do not know. Then sight reduce and plot
the lines. The stars will intersect at your correct latitude but the moon line (near vertical as it was near east or west) will defer by an amount that reflects the
error in your watch.
Then you just iterate the process with guess of the watch error till all three lines coincide and that is then the correct watch error. The procedure is
illustrated with additional tricks to expedite the iterations at http://davidburchnavigation.blogspot.com/2013/01/utc-by-lunar-altitudes.html. This is an
important process to add to your bag of tricks. Testing it on your own will be a worthwhile and instructive exercise.
Instructions by Example
Here we will work through an example that shows both the prediction step (precomputation) and also the subsequent sight reduction. We will use
evening star sights on October 25, 1978 from a DR position of (45° 22’ N, 140° 15’ W) as an example. The other data needed are: IC = 3.6’ Off, HE = 9 ft,
WE = 5s slow, ZD = + 9h.
Step 1. Predict the UTC that you will start the sights by looking up the time of evening civil twilight in the Nautical Almanac. The tabulated time is the
UTC of civil twilight at Greenwich; so to find the time of twilight at your position, add your west longitude of 140° 15’ in time units. (For morning sights,
use the time of Nautical Twilight).
From T-4 (Daily pages), evening civil Twilight = 17h 28m at Lat 45° N.
From T-7 (Arc to time), 140° 15’ W = + 9h 21m,
so UTC of civil twilight at your position = 26h 49m
= 02h 49m October 26.
Step 2. Find LHA Aries at twilight just as we did for Polaris sights in Section 7.8. In this example the time is 02h 49m UTC on October 26.
From T-3 GHA Aries at 02h = 64° 5.7’
From T-11 the 49m 00s corr = +12° 17.0’
or GHA Aries at 02h 49m = 76° 22.7’
Now subtract DR-Lon West = -140° 15.0’
+360°
LHA Aries = 296° 7.7’ rounded → 296.0°
Step 3. Use Pub. 249 Vol. 1 to find your stars by rounding off your DR-Lat to the nearest whole degree (45° N) and go to that page in Pub. 249 Vol.1, and
then to the row labeled with the LHA Aries (296°). You will then find the predicted heights and bearings of the seven stars best suited for sights at this
time. See example in Figure 11.27-1, which also lists the actual sights taken of the predicted stars.
Figure 11.27-1 Top right is a sample section of a page from Pub. 249, Vol 1. Selected Stars, showing the stars it proposes you use when your Lat = 45N and the time is such that the LHA
of Aries = 296°. Stars in caps are the bright ones. The three marked with diamonds are the triad they propose for the best fix, taking into account relative bearings (i.e., closest to 120°
apart), brightness, and altitude. The bottom left shows a list of these stars, and the bottom right shows the actual sights taken of the three proposed stars. See Steps 4 and 5 for how to sight
reduce these sights. They are then plotted in Figure 11.27-2.
Step 4. The three best of the seven are marked with an *, meaning these are the ones closest to 120º apart in bearing. Stars in CAPS are the bright ones.
Take several sights of the three best in rotation as soon as the stars are visible. Set your sextant to Hc and look in the true direction Zn. The stars will be in
view near the horizon in the telescope. Adjust the sextant and record the watch time as usual for each one.
Step 5. At this point, you could do the sight reductions in the usual way using Pub. 229 or some other set of tables to get your LOPs. Note that you
typically cannot use Pub. 249 Vols. 2 and 3 as we did for the earlier star sights, since Vols. 2 and 3 include only declinations less than 29°, whereas the
seven predicted stars will have all declinations. But there is an easier way to get the LOPs using Vol. 1 itself.
Then from Pub. 249, Vol. 1 at Lat 45° N and the appropriate LHA Aries find:
These lines are plotted in Figure 11.27-2. Figure 11.27-3 compares the Altair and Arcturus sight reductions this way with the same ones done with Vol. 3.
The different procedures lead to different assumed positions, but still the same fix, as shown plotted in Figure 11.27-4.
Figure 11.27-2 Plot of the three star sights reduced with Pub. 249, Vol. 1. The data are presented at the end of Step 6. They have been transferred to Box 6 of our regular sight reduction
form.
The Arcturus and Altair sights are also plotted again in Figure 11.27-4 to illustrate using different a-values from different assumed positions but still ending up with the same fix. The Vol. 1
method leads to different assumed positions than the Vol. 3 method, but you still get the same fix.
Figure 11.27-3 Comparison of star sight reduction by Pub. 249 Vol. 1 (Selected Stars) and by Vol. 3. The Vol. 3 method can be applied to any star whose declination is between N29 and
S29, but not others. That method is the standard method for sun, moon, and planets. The Vol. 1 method is for stars alone, but it only works on the stars they select as the best for the
circumstances. The Vol. 1 method for stars uses the same tables for sight reduction that are used for precomputation.
Figure 11.27-4 Plot of the LOPs from Figure 11.27-3 showing that different sight reduction methods lead to the same fix, even when they have different assumed positions. We get different
assumed longitudes in the two methods because one uses LHA of the star and the other uses LHA of Aries.
Advantages
(1) Fast and easy—no hunting for the stars.
(2) Don’t have to know the stars you’re shooting.
(3) With a preset sextant and sextant telescope you can see the stars very early in twilight. This means you are sighting with a sharp horizon that gives
more accurate sights and since you start as early as possible you have longer for your sights.
(4) You can get GHA Aries from the back of Pub. 249 Vol. 1, which makes this one volume a self-contained method of star sights. The altitude
corrections and Arc to Time tables are also included, so you don’t need an almanac to do star sights this way.
Disadvantages
(1) Basically, there are no disadvantages providing two or three of the seven stars it predicts are out when you need them—and they will be most of the
time.
(2) Occasionally, you will predict a star at one LHA Aries but not get the sight until a later one. And sometimes at the later LHA Aries the star is not
listed. We see this in our example if the Mirfak and Arcturus sights were taken in the other order. At LHA Aries = 300°, Arcturus is not listed. If missing
by only 1º, choose a new assumed longitude, and you’re back in business. If missing by more than 1º, you must do the sight reduction for that star with
some other means, like your backup set of the NAO Tables.
(3) Vol. 1 of Pub. 249 is printed every 5 years. Near the limits of the printing period (called the Epoch of the edition), errors in the fix may be as large
as 2 or 3 miles. There is, however, a table in the back of Vol. 1 for making this correction. Usually you can neglect this correction, but there is no need to. It
is an easy one to make.
(4) There are alternative sources of star precompuation, namely the 2102-D Star Finder (Section 11.24), and using that device has the advantage of
combining stars with planets for the best choice of sights at a given time.
An historical note: Pub. 249 Vol. 1 was once an official US government publication, but this is no longer the case. In 2014, it was discontinued. It is
now only available from commercial sources. This in itself is not a disadvantage. The publication no longer has the sanction of the USNO or NAO, but
there is no reason to believe the commercial edition is not just as good, if not better than the historic government publication. The 2102-D Star Finder is in
the same category: once a government publication, now only commercial, and it has survived in this format and served the needs of celestial navigators for
many decades.
For extensive practice with sight reductions using real sextant sights from an ocean passage that are presented with both traditional paper solutions as
well as computed solutions see the book Hawaii by Sextant (Starpath Publications, 2014).
If you do intend to rely on computed solutions—after, of course, learning the traditional methods covered in this book—then you only need a few
plotting sheets and a Nautical Almanac as a back up. It includes the NAO Sight Reduction Tables, so that will do all of it. The use of these tables is covered
in Section 11.29. Alternatively, if you want to back up just sun and star sights, you can use Geoffrey Kolbe's Long Term Almanac (Starpath Publications,
2008). It is a one-thin-book cel nav solution that lasts until 2050.
A Bit of History
The NAO tables were the invention of Admiral Thomas Davies and Dr. Paul Janiczek, then Head of the Astronomical Applications Department of the
US Naval Observatory They were originally published as the Concise Tables for Sight Reduction by Cornell Maritime Press. This type of tables is referred
to as “concise,” or “compact” tables, as opposed to the full form tables such as Pub. 229 and 249, which are referred to as “inspection tables,” since they
require fewer steps.
Forerunners of these short tables were the Ageton Tables (Pub. 211) and the Dreisenstock Tables (Pub. 208). The Ageton Tables were included in
Bowditch, Vol. 2 (editions prior to 1985) but not included in later editions, perhaps because they are now in the Nautical Almanac. Both Ageton and
Dreisenstock are long out of print. US Power Squadron courses on celestial switched to the new NAO tables shortly after they were published, with the
help of USPS National Education Director Dr. Allan Bayless, who had published his own version of the tables called Compact Sight Reduction Tables.
Admiral Davies was aware of the Starpath work form (Form 106) for the NAO tables and suggested at the time that it be included in the Nautical
Almanac, which was agreed upon by the US NAO. The almanac, however, is a joint publication with the British NAO, and at the time they did not want to
include any forms in the almanac, so this was dropped. In 2006, there was a change of heart in the UK, and a single-column work form does now appear in
the almanac for these tables. It is better than none, but it remains valuable to keep a Starpath form for these tables in the almanac, since it takes you step by
step through the process with no further instructions required.
For more practice, take any sight from the book (i.e., a-Lat, dec, and LHA) and then solve for Hc and Zn with the NAO tables—and for even more
precise comparison, check your results with the computed sight reduction online at www.starpath.com/calc.
The NAO tables are an excellent back up method, especially if you are relying on computed cel nav solutions routinely. With little practice, you will
see the process goes very quickly, at which time it evolves from a complex solution to an elegant solution.
11.30 N(x) Table
This optional section is way outside of routine cel nav. It is for those who might like the novelty of doing a sight reduction with the world’s shortest Sight
Reduction Table, which we have called the N(x) table. The examples here use that table (T-27) and the Emergency Sun Almanac (T-28), from the Tables
Selections. In Figure 11.30-1 the emergency almanac is used to find GHA and Dec of the sun; in Figure 11.30-2 the N(x) table is used for sight reduction.
The results are then compared to Sun #6 & Sun #7 worked by Pub. 249 in the Answers section and by USNO computations in Table 11.30-1.
Figure 11.30-1 Use of the Emergency Sun Almanac from the Emergency Navigation Card. See T-28 in Table Selections.
Figure 11.30-2 Use of the N(x) Sight Reduction Tables. The sights are plotted in Figure 11.30-3. The instructions are located with the N(x) Table in Table Selections T-27.
Figure 11.30-3 Sample plot of Sights 1 & 2 from 11.30-1. Reduction of Sight 2 is not shown but the process is the same as for Sight 1.
11.31 Nuts and Bolts of Ocean Navigation
There is a lot we learn from a first ocean passage that we wish we had known before we left. We will look at a few of these from the navigator’s
perspective, and focus on those that might not be on the standard list of forethoughts. Some are personal preferences, with obvious options, others are
nuances. We raise the issues so that you can think on your own solutions. The many declarative sentences are for the sake of brevity, not authority.
Experienced sailors will have valid differences.
Navigation means knowing where you are on a chart and then choosing the best route to where you want to go. It is always the latter task that is the
biggest challenge, meaning it requires the most knowledge and skill. This is especially true in the GPS age, but it was just as true when we had only
celestial navigation to go by.
So we will talk about navigation and not even worry about where we are! We get that from the GPS, and if all the backups fail, we get out the sextant.
We look instead at the broader picture of successful navigation of a sailboat in the typical environment we have at sea on an ocean passage. There are some
differences racing and cruising, but the basics are the same if you choose to get there in the most efficient manner, which includes of course just getting
there at all if many things go wrong at once.
Accurate Time
Dealing with that last thought first, it is important to know the correct time (UTC) at sea, because we can navigate to any port in the world with accurate
time alone—we don’t even need a sextant—so it pays to wear an old-fashioned watch and navigate by the time on that watch. Then maintain a chronometer
log of the watch error from which we can confirm the rate of the watch, meaning how many seconds it gains or loses per day or week, and from that we can
figure the right time by applying the ever-increasing watch error on any date in the future.
And most important, do not change time zones while underway. Choose the zone you want for ship’s time before you leave and stick with it till you
arrive. Changing times underway, or changing anything on it, is just asking for trouble, even if everything is working properly. We have notes on
timekeeping in Section 11.5.
Sail Waypoints
If we are not sailing to specific waypoints, we are not navigating; we are just out sailing. Even on an ocean passage we need waypoints. There is
essentially no efficient ocean crossing that has just one waypoint at the destination. Needless to say we want one there, and we should always keep an eye
on the VMG to that one, but there will be intermediate ones we set and change as we proceed, and the immediate navigation is to maximize VMG to that
active waypoint.
Sailing around the corner of the Pacific High, for example, you might use some guideline to mark the corner such as two full isobars off the central high
pressure. This choice depends on how far you are from that point. If you have a 3- or 4-day forecast of the winds that might let you cut it a bit closer, then
you can try that. But the main job is to set one and optimize speed to it until you have good reason to move it. The forecast might change and call for
heading more south toward the trades for a while, or let you sail a bit closer to the rhumb line.
Once around the corner, you might set another waypoint based on the forecast of the trade winds closer to your destination. In other words, with the
present forecast of the trades out to 800 nmi you might choose the point that sets you up for your best wind angles if you were at that point and the trades
did indeed stay as forecasted in speed and direction (Figure 11.31-1). Then you again watch that and adjust as needed. Both the speed and the direction of
the trades could cause the waypoint to shift.
Figure 11.31-1 Setting waypoints and approach cone based on sailing performance and anticipated wind conditions ahead.
When sailing waypoints in this manner, sometimes the course is crucial—that is, if we do not make that waypoint we could lose a lot of efficiency; so
we have to fight to make it. In this case the navigator's job is to stress this point and also keep a more careful watch on what is actually being steered and
recorded in the logbook. With all the electronics working, we have an exact trail on the echart of what we are making good; so if we are not making it, we
need to study the situation to find out why and try to correct it. Not to sound too crass, but you may have one watch that just wants to go fast, so they are
reaching a little extra all the time–not looking ahead to the consequences. Again, we are back to getting the crew involved with the navigation.
On the other hand, there can be circumstances when you have a lot more freedom and you can simply say go as fast as you can (with present sails set),
always looking ahead to see if a crucial waypoint might be developing.
Selecting waypoints and approach cone from forecasted winds. Adapted from Modern Marine Weather.
Figure 11.32-1 Most likely point P (6.7, 5.4) determined from three LOPs, without systematic error. The variance of each LOP is shown schematically to match the units chosen to measure
the sides of the triangle from the chart. If the units were miles, a centroid choice would be wrong by 3 miles.
Note 1. "Most Likely Position from n LOPs with Random and Systematic Variances" by Richard Rice and David Burch, to be published. This paper presents the derivation of the full
probability distribution and includes an app that displays the distribution graphically for user-selected inputs, with and without a systematic error that applies to all sights.
Then with Q1 = (0, 0), Q2 = (13, 0), and Q3 = (5.7, 6.9), we get:
The history of this most basic of navigation questions is reviewed in the paper [1], along with other examples and extended discussion. This is the first
solution we have seen that offers a fast practical way to answer this question if it should be needed underway.
Appendix 1
GLOSSARY
These definitions are in the terminology of this book. Standard terms and abbreviations are used throughout, although the interpretations of some are simplified or expanded for clarity. This glossary
includes content details expanded in some cases beyond the presentation in the text. A list of Abbreviations alone is at the end of the Glossary.
a-value — Same as altitude intercept. Called the “a-value,” it is the difference, found in the last step of a sight reduction, between the calculated height (Hc) and the observed height (Ho) of a celestial body. It
is used for plotting the LOP. It is labeled A (away) if Hc is greater than Ho, or T (toward) if Hc is less than Ho. In physical terms, “a” tells if we are closer or farther from the GP than the assumed position
is. An a-value of 20’ T, for example, means your true position is 20’ (20 nmi) closer to the GP than the assumed position is.
Accuracy — The difference between your true position and the fix position found from a round of celestial sights. Generally this is better thought of as the uncertainty in your fix, which, with good
procedures and a good sextant, should be less than 3 or 4 miles routinely. This can be improved to about 0.5 miles, but this requires special care, especially when moving. Anything more than about 10
miles indicates some problem with procedures or equipment. A rough way to judge your accuracy is the size of the triangle of crossed lines of position, assuming that each side of the triangle represents
the average of several sights of the same body. The most accurate fix comes from sights of three bodies, bearing about 120° apart. See Sextant Sights and Fix.
Accuracy in dead reckoning is the difference between your fix position and your DR position at the time of the fix. With calibrated instruments and careful dead reckoning this should be no worse than
about 15% of the distance run since the last fix, although this depends very much on the conditions present. See Dead Reckoning.
Additional Altitude Correction — Used only in the sight reduction of the moon, Mars, or Venus (the three closest celestial bodies), this correction accounts for the parallax of their light rays—that is, since
each of these bodies is so close to the earth, the light ray we see it with is not strictly parallel to the light ray from it that passes through its geographical position (GP). The theory of celestial navigation
assumes that the distance along the earth’s surface between the observer and the GP is equal to the zenith distance (z) of the body, but this is only true if these two light rays are parallel. So for these three
close bodies this extra correction is required. See Parallax.
Another, completely different, type of Additional Altitude Correction is also discussed and tabulated in the Table A4 of the Nautical Almanac. These are additional corrections for non-standard refraction
in unusual atmospheric conditions. In principle, these corrections apply to all sights, but from a practical point of view they can be neglected. The corrections are very small for all sights except those near
the horizon (which should be avoided anyway if possible). There is no space for this type of additional correction on the Starpath work forms. It is recommended that this atmospheric correction just be
ignored, but bear in mind that any sights within about 5° of the horizon will be uncertain by plus or minus 5’ or so. See Refraction.
Advanced LOP — A line of position that has been shifted on the chart or plotting sheet to correct for the boat’s motion since the time of the sight. Section 11.24 includes a method of numerically advancing
an LOP by adjusting the a-value. See Running Fix.
Air Almanac — A questionable alternative to the Nautical Almanac that some very few marine navigators prefer. It is not as convenient to use, nor as complete, nor as easy to obtain. As of 2008, only
available on CD. It is not recommended.
Altitude — Same as Height. A general name for the angular height of a celestial body above the horizon that is determined from a sextant measurement or sight reduction. Angular height is often called
“altitude” in other textbooks. When a body is right on the horizon, its height is 0°; when a body is overhead, its height is 90°. The term is used more precisely depending on the number of corrections that
have been made to the sextant measurement. See Sextant Height, Apparent Height, Observed Height, and Calculated Height.
Altitude Correction — When doing a sight reduction, this is the final correction to the sextant height needed to get the observed height. This term actually describes several different corrections (although we
don’t need to know this detail to use it): for the sun this correction is primarily the refraction and semi-diameter corrections; for the moon and planets it includes these and also a parallax correction; and
for stars the altitude correction includes only refraction. See Refraction, Semi-diameter, Parallax, and Additional Altitude Correction.
Altitude Intercept (a-value) —The difference, found in the last step of a sight reduction, between the calculated height (Hc) and the observed height (Ho) of a celestial body. It is used for plotting the LOP. It
is labeled A (away) if Hc is greater than Ho, or T (toward) if Hc is less than Ho. In physical terms, the a-value tells if we are closer or farther from the GP than the assumed position is. An a-value of 20’ T,
for example, means your true position is 20’ closer to the GP than the assumed position is.
Amplitude — A convenient term (although little used in routine navigation) that describes the bearing of any celestial body on the horizon (when rising or setting). It is the number of degrees away from due
east or west that a body rises or sets. It is labeled North or South according to its location relative to east or west. If a body has an amplitude of 30° N, it rises 30° north of east (at 060 T) and sets 30° north
of west (at 300 T). The name (N or S) of the amplitude is always the same as that of the declination. With a calculator, amplitude can be found from: Sin(Amp) = Sin(dec) / Cos(Lat), but this is technically
Hc =0, which is not precisely what we observe because of refraction. USCG exams cover this topic as a way to do compass checks, but we do not cover amplitude in this course.
Apparent Height (Ha) — Every sight reduction starts with the sextant height (Hs) and ends up with the observed height (Ho). But to do this we must first figure this intermediate value, called the apparent
height, which has only the index and dip corrections removed: Ha = Hs + IC - Dip. This height should be agreed upon by all observers who took sights at the same time, even though they used different
sextants (different ICs) and stood at different elevations (different dips). It is only “apparent,” however, because it is not correct.
Aries (♈) — Also called the First Point of Aries, this is the celestial equivalent to the Greenwich meridian. Longitude lines on a star globe (called sidereal hour angles, SHA) are all relative to Aries, just as
earth longitudes are all relative to Greenwich. As the earth turns, the Aries meridian circles the earth once every 24 hours. In star sight reductions, to find the star’s GHA from the Nautical Almanac, add
the permanent SHA of the star to the GHA of Aries at the time of the sight. The meridian of Aries passes approximately through Polaris and Caph, the leading star of Cassiopeia; extended backwards from
Polaris, it passes through Phecda, inside the cup of the Big Dipper.
Assumed Latitude (a-Lat)— The latitude of the assumed position chosen during a sight reduction to facilitate the use of Sight Reduction Tables. It is always chosen to be your DR-Lat rounded off to the
nearest whole degree. If DR-Lat = 35° 20’ N, a-Lat = 35° N. If DR-Lat = 35° 46’ S, a-Lat = 36° S. If the minutes part of DR-Lat is exactly 30’, a-Lat can be rounded up or down. See Assumed Position.
Assumed Longitude (a-Lon) — The longitude of the assumed position chosen during a sight reduction to facilitate the use of Sight Reduction Tables. The proper choice depends on your DR-Lon and the
minutes part of the sighted body’s GHA at the time of the sight. In west longitudes, it is the one longitude that lies within 30’ of your DR-Lon that has the same minutes part as that of the GHA. In east
longitudes, it is the one longitude that lies within 30’ of DR-Lon that has a minutes part equal to 60’ minus the minutes part of GHA. With a-Lon chosen properly, the local hour angle (LHA) of the
sighted body will be a whole number of degrees. See Assumed Position.
Assumed Position (AP) — The position (a-Lat, a-Lon) chosen by the navigator during the sight reduction process to facilitate the use of Sight Reduction Tables. This is a purely fictitious position (no boat or
celestial body is located there) that must be chosen as a reference point for the calculations since Sight Reduction Tables give solutions for only whole degrees of Lat and LHA. Each sextant sight will
have a unique assumed position, and the LOP of that sight must be plotted from that position. It is recorded in Box 6 of the work form. Sight reductions by programmed calculators do not require or use an
assumed position.
Azimuth (Zn) — The true bearing (between 0° and 360°) of a celestial body from the assumed position at the time of the sight. In a sight reduction (work form, Boxes 5 and 6), it is obtained from applying
the azimuth rules to the azimuth angle (Z). These rules are given on the work forms and on each page of the Sight Reduction Tables. Azimuth is also used outside of celestial navigation as a general term
for any true bearing.
Azimuth Angle (Z) — The relative bearing (between 0° and 180°) of a celestial body viewed from the assumed position at the time of the sight. It is found in the Sight Reduction Tables (work form, Box 5);
it is measured relative to due north in north latitudes and relative to due south in south latitudes. The abbreviation is capital Z, as opposed to the azimuth, which is abbreviated Zn. Rules for converting Z to
Zn are different in the NH and SH because we use the North Pole for reference in both hemispheres. See elevated pole and Navigational Triangle.
Azimuth Line — In plotting the LOP, it is the line drawn through the assumed position in the direction of Zn. The azimuth line points to the GP. See Plotting LOPs.
Bearing — The direction on earth of some point relative to the true North (True bearings) or magnetic north (Magnetic bearings). If the bearing to Mount St. Helens is 135 T, you find this direction by facing
north and then rotating 135° to the right. Due east has a true bearing of 090°. A phrase like “due east” always implies true bearings unless specified otherwise. If the bearing to Deception Pass is 050 M,
you would face magnetic north and turn 50° to the right. If your steering compass has no deviation, it should read 050 when Deception Pass is on the bow. The difference between true and magnetic
bearings at any one place is called the magnetic variation at that place. It is given on all nautical charts. See Deviation and Variation.
Bowditch — Nickname for the navigational encyclopedia called the American Practical Navigator, originally by Nathaniel Bowditch. The first edition was in 1802, the latest was a special bicentennial
edition in 2002. It includes most tables needed for navigation as well as an extensive authoritative glossary. It is NGA Pub. No. 9. All navigation questions are answered there, but it is not easy reading in
many places. Notably good (in earlier editions) and quite easy reading, however, are its sections on sextant care and use, star identification, and chapters on weather and oceanography. A complete
electronic copy of the latest as well as earlier ones are available online. See Section 11.1.
Calculated Height (Hc) — Found from Sight Reduction Tables or mathematical computation, it is the height of the celestial body that would have been observed from the assumed position at the time of the
sight, assuming no refraction and no HE. At the end of a sight reduction, Hc is compared to Ho (observed height) to figure the altitude intercept (a-value) which in turn is used to plot the line of position. It
is also called calculated altitude. The mathematical determination of Hc is found from solving the navigational triangle.
Calculators — Meaning, here, handheld calculators or apps in mobile devices specially programmed for celestial navigation calculations. They can do sight reductions and calculate celestial positions
(declinations and Greenwich hour angles) normally found in an almanac. Another, perhaps even more valuable, function is their ability to do dead reckoning. See Section 11.28.
Celestial Body — Stars, sun, moon, and planets.
Celestial Navigation — The process of finding your position from timed sextant sights of celestial bodies. Related work under this same general title includes calculating bearings to celestial bodies for
compass checks, figuring great-circle routes and distances between ports, and star identification. Outside of the US, this is often called astro navigation. An astronomer might call it positional astronomy.
Chronometer — Any watch that gains or loses time at a constant rate. These days, essentially any quartz watch is a chronometer with constant rate of less than about 15 seconds per month. See Watch Rate,
Watch Time, and Watch Error.
Chronometer Log — That part of your logbook devoted to recording the daily checks of your watch error. It is best to plot the daily watch errors versus the date to see that the watch rate is constant, meaning
that these daily points make a straight line. The slope of this line is your watch rate. See Logbook, Watch Time, Watch Error, and Watch Rate.
Circle of Equal Altitude — Any circle of points on the earth’s surface that is equal distance from the geographical position (GP) of a celestial body at a precise moment of time. All observers located
anywhere on this circle would measure the same sextant height of the body at that moment. The center of the circle is the GP of the body, the radius of the circle is the zenith distance (z). The Ho they
would observe is Ho = 90° - z. When taking the sights, the observers would all be looking toward the body in the center of the circle, which means some would be looking north, others, south or west, etc..
If the body were 60° high, the zenith distance would be 30°, which means the distance to the GP would be 30° × (60 miles/1°), or 1,800 miles. The LOPs used in celestial navigation are short segments of
the circumference of this circle, which we approximate as straight lines.
Circle of Position — A line of position that is curved into a circle. These are obtained only rarely in celestial navigation from high-altitude sights, or much more frequently in coastal navigation from distance
off measurements. See Line of Position and High-Altitude Sights.
Circumpolar Stars — The disk of stars, centered at the pole, which never rise or set and consequently are visible all night, every night of the year. In Seattle, the end of the handle of the Big Dipper (Alkaid)
and the bright star Capella in Auriga, opposite it across the pole, represent the approximate extent of the circumpolar stars for this latitude. In Hawaii, the Big Dipper swings below the horizon, but the
Little Dipper remains circumpolar.
Civil Twilight — That time of evening, listed in the Nautical Almanac, when we first see the brightest stars, typically about 20 to 40 minutes after sunset depending on latitude and time of year. In the
morning, this time is interpreted as when the brightest stars fade into the daylight sky, about 20 to 40 minutes before sunrise. Evening star sights are taken between civil and nautical twilight; morning
sights between nautical and civil twilight. See Nautical Twilight.
Compass Rose — The 360° protractor in the center of a plotting sheet, or located throughout nautical charts. The name is somewhat misleading, since even the scales referenced to true north are called
“compass” roses. On nautical charts, there are both true and magnetic scales, but on plotting sheets there are only true scales. See Protractor.
Contrary Name — The term used to describe a declination that has the opposite name (North or South) from your latitude. A star with Dec N 19° has Contrary Name if you are at 30° S, but Same Name is
you are at 30° N.
Course — The direction you want to travel, usually read from a nautical chart by drawing a line from here to there (a rhumb-line course) and then reading this direction from the compass rose. It can be
specified True, Magnetic, or Compass. With no deviation, Magnetic and Compass are the same. See Heading, Bearing, and Course Over Ground
Course Over Ground (COG) — Your true course made good relative to the fixed earth measured with a GPS. It is the actual direction you are traveling at the moment regardless of the course steered and
temporary variations in heading around this course. Factors that cause COG to differ from the course being steered include: current, leeway, helm bias, and compass errors. See also Speed Over Ground.
Daily Pages — The main body of the Nautical Almanac that includes daily data for the celestial bodies.
d-Correction (d-corr) — When doing a sight reduction, it is a correction to the declination that accounts for its change during the minutes part of the sight time. The same term is used for another correction
done during the sight reduction to correct the tabulated value of the calculated height (Hc) for the minutes part of the declination. See Sight Reduction, Sight Reduction Tables, and d-Value.
d-Value — Numbers given in celestial navigation tables that are used for interpolation. The d-value for declination (work form, Box 2), given in the Nautical Almanac, is the number of minutes the
declination changes each hour. We must determine its sign (±) by inspection. This varies with the sun from 0 (near solstices) to 1’ per hour (near equinoxes). For the stars this d is effectively 0, as they do
not change. For the moon it can be rather large, up to 13’ per hour or so, and it changes rather quickly with time. Declination of Venus can change up to 1.3’ per hour; the other planets have very low d-
values, less than 0.3’ or so. The d-value for the calculated height (work form, Box 5), given in Sight Reduction Tables, is the number of minutes that this height (Hc) changes if declination increases by 1°;
its sign is given. This use and definition of “d-value” is totally different from the one above.
Davies Tables — Nickname for the Concise Tables for Sight Reduction by Admr. Thomas D. Davies. These were originally published by Cornell Maritime Press. They have evolved into the tables now
called NAO Tables, which are included in each Nautical Almanac since 1989. See NAO Tables.
Dead Reckoning (DR) — Keeping track of your position from your log (odometer) reading and compass course recorded in a logbook and then adjusting this position by your knowledge of leeway and
current. In this course, we consider the process of DR to be using everything you know about your position, short of an actual fix or other piloting information. See DR Position.
Declination (Dec) — This is a fundamental concept in celestial navigation. It is the latitude of the geographical position of any celestial body. Stars have very nearly constant declinations; they can have any
value between N 90° and S 90°. The sun’s declination varies slowly throughout the year from N 23.4° to S 23.4°. The declinations of the moon and planets vary in a more complex manner between about
N 30° to S 30°. The N, S label is conventionally placed before the declination to distinguish it from geographic latitude, which is written with the label after the value, i.e., a star with declination N 19º
passes once a day over all points on earth that have latitude 19º N. See Geographical Position.
Declination Increment — This is an official name of the minutes part of the declination. We do not use this term in our course, but it is used in the Pub. 229 Sight Reduction Tables. In our course, we call
this “the minutes part of the declination.”
Deviation — A compass error caused by magnetic materials on the boat. If your compass reads too high on a particular heading, the deviation is called “west,” if too low, it is called “east.” If you have
deviation on any one heading, you will have different errors on other headings.
Dip — A correction to the sextant height to account for the height of eye (HE) at the sight time. In math terms, it is the angle between the geometric horizon (true horizontal) and the visible horizon which is
tilted because of the observer’s height above the water. The effect of the dip is to make every sextant height too large by a small amount (equal to 0.97’ times the square root of HE in feet). Dip corrections
are tabulated in the Nautical Almanac. The dip correction expressed in miles (1’ = 1 mile) is approximately equal to the distance from the observer to the last visible point on the horizon.
Dividers — A plotting tool used in navigation to transfer distances from one place to another on a chart or plotting sheet, such as distance between buoys to a miles scale.
DR Latitude — The latitude of your DR position. See DR Position.
DR Longitude — The longitude of your DR position. See DR Position.
DR Plot — A plot on the plotting sheet of your DR track records (from the logbook), showing how far and in what direction you traveled since your last fix. Once a new fix is obtained, this plot is abandoned
and a new one started from the latest fix. This plot is the most important part of ocean navigation. It must be done carefully if you are to test the accuracy of your DR. See Accuracy, Dead Reckoning, and
Plotting.
DR Position — In this course we treat this as your best evaluation of your position taking into account everything you know about your progress since the last fix. Besides log and compass records, you also
have leeway, estimated currents, and helm bias as typical corrections to make. See Section 11.11.
DR Track — Same as DR plot.
Drift — The speed of a current, expressed in knots or nautical miles per day. Pilot charts plot ocean currents. There are also world maps showing currents in Bowditch, along with a discussion of the currents.
See set.
Easy LAN Rule — A reminder that once you have declination and zenith distance, your LAN latitude is the sum or difference of these two. There are standard rules to decide when to do which, or this rule
says simply add them, and if that does not make sense, subtract them. Comparison with your DR Lat will usually answer this.
Ecliptic — The annual path of the sun through the stars. The 12 zodiac constellations are located along the ecliptic. The sun moves along this path at 1º per day relative to the stars (from 360° divided by 365
days). The First Point of Aries is astronomically defined as the intersection of the ecliptic and the celestial equator (the line across the sky that separates northern stars from southern stars). The term
ecliptic is not directly used in the practice of navigation. The zodiac constellation observed on the horizon just before the rising sun and just following the setting sun tells the position of the sun along the
ecliptic, and has served for thousands of years as a stellar calendar. Because the orbits of the moon and planets lie in the same plane with the earth’s orbit, these bodies are also always seen along the
ecliptic. Whenever the moon and planets can be seen together, they will form a line (giant arc) across the sky. At twilight, this line also includes the point on the horizon that the sun crosses. See Aries.
Elevated Pole — A navigator’s term referring to the north pole of the sky in the Northern Hemisphere and the south pole of the sky in the Southern Hemisphere. This concept allows for precise shorthand
descriptions, such as the azimuth angle is measured “relative to the elevated pole,” instead of saying, “relative to N in the NH and relative to S in the SH” .
Ellipsoidal Distance — Shortest distance on the earth between two points taking into account the geodedic datum used to describe the shape of the earth. It will vary slightly from the great circle distance.
EPIRB — Emergency Position-Indicating Radio Beacon, a small portable radio that emits distress signals when activated. Monitored by satellites and aircraft, they are an important emergency aid. The
system is improving rapidly; every vessel should carry one.
Equation of Time (EqT) — The time difference between the actual UTC of local apparent noon at Greenwich and 12:00:00. It varies throughout the year in a smooth but irregular way from about +14
minutes to about -16 minutes. EqT is listed twice daily in the Nautical Almanac. This variation is caused by the tilt of the earth’s rotation axis and the varying orbital speed of the earth along its slightly
elliptical path around the sun.
Equinoxes — The 2 days of the year when the sun crosses the equator as its declination changes from south to north (March 21) and then back to south again (September 23). On the equinoxes, the sun rises
due east at 6 am and sets due west at 6 pm solar time everywhere on earth. Hence the name, equinox, which means “equal nights,” or day and night of equal length.
Fix — A position, latitude and longitude, found by the navigator from the intersection of two or more LOPs, or given to the navigator from GPS or radar.
Full-View Mirror — Although this may be a trade name for one specific model, it generally refers to that type of sextant horizon mirror with a special horizon glass that replaces the traditional split mirror
with an optically coated glass that both reflects and transmits light over the full range of view. It makes easy sights easier, but hard sights harder, since its principle of operation loses light intensity at the
horizon glass. Nevertheless, they are attractive to first time sextant users because most sights fall into the easy category. Problems occur for faint stars, or when checking the index correction, or inverting
the sextant when there is little contrast between sky and water color. Full-view mirrors are also difficult to use for sextant piloting. See Index Correction, Inverting the Sextant, and Horizon Glass, Sextant
Piloting.
Geographical Position (GP) — The point on earth directly below a celestial body; or put another way, a star can appear directly overhead only if you are standing at its GP. The latitude of the GP of a
celestial body is called its declination; the longitude of the GP is called its Greenwich hour angle (GHA). As the earth rotates, the GPs of all celestial bodies move westward at about 15° of longitude each
hour along the surface of the earth, locked in tracks of fixed latitudes equal to their declinations. (The moon is the only body whose declination track slips north or south a noticeable amount during a
single day’s pass around the earth). The main function of the Nautical Almanac is to tell us the precise location of the GPs of all celestial bodies, at all times, throughout the year.
Global Positioning System (GPS) — The name of the satellite navigation system that began public operation in the mid-1980s. It offers continuous, high-accuracy navigation. See Section 11.3.
Great Circle (GC) — The intersection of a plane and a sphere (the earth) on the surface of the sphere is a circle. If the plane passes through the center of the sphere the circle is a great circle. The shortest
distance between two points on the surface of the earth (assumed a sphere) is the segment of the great circle passing between the two points. For any angular segment of a great circle on the earth 1° = 60
nmi. See also Ellipsoidal Distance.
Great-Circle Route — The shortest route between two points on earth. It is rarely possible to follow such a route in a sailboat, but there is also rarely any advantage to trying. The difference in distance
between a rhumb-line route and a great-circle route is insignificant unless both the departure and destination are at high latitudes (above 45° or so) and the trip itself is more than 2,000 miles long. Most
voyages are planned with simple rhumb-line routes through prevailing wind patterns. See Course, Rhumb line.
Greenwich Hour Angle (GHA) — The longitude of the geographical position (GP) of a celestial body, given in the Nautical Almanac as a positive angle between 0° and 360°. It is the Almanac’s way of
telling how far a GP is west of Greenwich. If GHA = 30°, the longitude of this GP is 30° West. If GHA = 270°, the longitude of the GP is 90° East. The GHAs of celestial bodies move westward at about
15° of longitude each hour.
Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) — The historic name of what is now called universal time. See Universal Time.
Greenwich Meridian — The meridian line passing through Greenwich (London) England, which is defined as longitude equals 0°. See Meridian.
H.O. — A now out-dated abbreviation for Hydrographic Office that used to precede the title numbers of various navigation tables published by the government, but it is no longer used. See Publication No.
H.O. 208 — Sight Reduction Tables, called the Dreisenstock method, similar to H.O. 211 that survive only because of an excellent book by John Letcher on how to use them.
H.O. 211 — An out-dated set of Sight Reduction Tables, called the Ageton method, which was once reproduced in Bowditch, Vol. 2. as an emergency or backup means of sight reduction. These have now
been replaced in most similar applications by the NAO Tables.
H.O. 214 — The older Sight Reduction Tables that were replaced with Pub. No. 229.
Heading — The direction a boat is pointed. In a seaway, the heading generally swings back and forth across your desired course. “Course heading” is a redundant, and possibly confusing, phrase for
“course.” The question “What is your course?” means, “which way do you want to go?” “What is your heading?” means, “which way are you going right now?” See Course and Bearing.
Height — A general name for the angular height of a celestial body above the horizon that is determined from a sextant measurement or sight reduction. Angular height is often called “altitude” in other
textbooks. When a body is right on the horizon, its height is 0°; when a body is overhead, its height is 90°. The term is used more precisely depending on the number of corrections that have been made to
the sextant measurement. See Sextant Height, Apparent Height, Observed Height, and Calculated Height.
Height of Eye (HE) — The vertical distance from an observer’s eye to the water level. It is used for the dip correction to the sextant height in a sight reduction and to estimate the visible range of land and
lights. It is best expressed in feet.
High-Altitude Sights — Sextant sights of celestial bodies that are more than about 80° high. These sights are special for two reasons. First, they are difficult to take because it is difficult to tell which way to
point the sextant as you rock it; and second, once taken, they must be reduced by special methods.
A standard sight reduction will not yield an accurate line of position for high-altitude sights. It is important to remember this whenever you sail under the sun. At heights of 75° to 85° or so, you can still
do a standard sight reduction, but you must interpolate for the azimuth angle as explained in the Work-form Instructions, and then you should also adjust the slopes of the lines as explained in the
instructions to the Sight Reduction Tables.
Above 85°, it will be necessary to plot the geographical position on the plotting sheet and then plot a circle of position around it with a radius equal to the zenith distance of the sight. The book Emergency
Navigation explains these sights with examples. See Rocking the Sextant, Sextant Sights, Sight Reduction, Circle of Position, and Zenith Distance.
Horizon Glass — Part of a sextant, it is the half-mirrored glass in line with the telescope. On “full-view” sextants this glass is not split into a mirror-half and a glass-half, but is transparent throughout. See
Full-view Sextants.
Horizon mirror — The more common name for Horizon Glass.
Horizontal Parallax (HP) — The maximum value of the parallax angle of a celestial body, corresponding to its observation on the horizon. It is only used for moon-sight reductions (work forms, Box 2) and
is tabulated in the Nautical Almanac. Geometrically, HP is the angle between two lines, one from the center of the moon to the center of the earth, the other from the center of the moon to the edge of the
earth. This angle is about 56’, but it changes slightly from day to day as the distance to the moon changes along its elliptical path around the earth. See Parallax.
Increments and Corrections — The corrections tables at the back of the Nautical Almanac that are used to find the incremental increase to the Greenwich hour angle (GHA) for the minutes and seconds part
of the sight time and for finding the d-correction to the declination and the v-correction to GHA. See d-correction, Greenwich Hour Angle, and v-value.
Index Arm — Part of a sextant, it is the arm that rotates about the center of the arc. The index mirror is at the top of this arm, and the micrometer is at the bottom.
Index Correction (IC) — The sextant error caused by a misalignment of the two mirrors when the index arm is set to 0° and the micrometer is set to 0.0’. The correction is measured by aligning the direct
and reflected views of the horizon or a star and then reading the micrometer. If the reading is a small number, the IC is “on the scale” and the correction is to be subtracted. If the reading is a large number
such as 58.2’ the correction is 60’ minus 58.2’, or 1.8’ “off the scale” and the correction is to be added. The rule is, “If it’s on, take it off; if it’s off, put it on.” It is important to measure IC carefully at
some point, and then check it at each sight. The primary disadvantage of plastic sextants are unavoidable variations of the index correction, which means it must be checked frequently during any sight
session.
Index Error — See Index Correction.
Index Mirror — A part of the sextant, it is the mirror on the end of the index arm at the center of the arc.
Inverting the Sextant — The standard way to do star or planet sights that have not been precomputed. Set the sextant to 0° 0’, turn it upside down in the left hand, then looking up toward the star, keep the
star in direct view as you use the right hand to adjust the sextant to bring the horizon up to the star. Once star and horizon are both in view, turn the sextant back over and complete the sight in the normal
manner. See Precomputation and Sextant Sights.
Jupiter — One of the five planets visible to the naked eye (Jupiter, Venus, Mercury, Saturn, and Mars). Jupiter and Venus are the two main planets for navigation since they are always brighter than the
brightest stars and therefore their sights can be taken immediately after sunset or just before sunrise when the stars are not visible. Unlike Venus, however, Jupiter moves rather slowly through the stars.
Check the planet diagram in the Nautical Almanac to get a feeling for how it moves in any particular year. See Planet Diagram
Knot — The unit of speed used in navigation and meteorology. One knot equals one nautical mile per hour. “Knots per hour” is not correct terminology these days, but the point should not be pushed too
hard, because that is how it was originally used in 19th century logbooks.
Knotmeter — A boat’s speedometer.
Latitude (Lat) — Latitude and longitude are an imaginary grid used to locate positions on the earth’s surface. Latitude is the side of the grid that tells how far a place is north or south of the equator. It is the
angular distance of a point from the equator, measured north or south along a meridian line. To picture the angle, imagine the earth cut in half along any meridian line. Since a meridian line is a great
circle, the latitude of a place can be literally considered the number of miles it is from the equator. Latitude 30° N, for example, means all points on earth that are 30° × (60 miles/1°), or 1,800 miles north
of the equator. See Meridian, Great Circle, and Nautical Mile.
Latitude by Polaris — The procedure for finding your latitude from the sextant height of Polaris. This unique star sight is especially convenient since no precomputation is required; just set your sextant to
your DR-Lat, look north, and Polaris will be in view with the horizon. The simple sight reduction required is explained with examples in the Nautical Almanac—interestingly, this is the only place in the
Nautical Almanac that explains a way to navigate with the data provided in the book. Once you have found your latitude this way it is plotted on the chart as a line of position and used with other sights to
find a fix. See Polaris, Precomputation, and Polaris Corrections.
Line of Position (LOP) — Any line that marks the location of a boat, such as a bearing to a lighthouse in coastal waters or a sun line from a celestial sight at sea. With one known LOP, the boat is known to
be located somewhere on that line, but the precise place on the line is not known. Generally, a position fix is found from the intersection of two or more LOPs. In celestial navigation, each sextant sight
yields one LOP, so it takes at least two sights of different bodies to get a fix. See Plotting LOPs, Sun Lines, and Circle of Equal Altitude.
Local Apparent Noon (LAN) — The time of meridian passage of the sun. Often used as a name for the series of midday sights of the sun taken to find latitude.
Local Hour Angle (LHA) — Used in a sight reduction, it is the number of longitude degrees that the geographical position of a body is west of the assumed longitude (a-Lon). It is figured from the
Greenwich hour angle (GHA) as: LHA = GHA - a-Lon(West) or LHA = GHA + a-Lon(East). The GHA is listed in the Nautical Almanac. Although the rules for figuring it are different in east and west
longitudes, the meaning of the result is the same. When using Sight Reduction Tables, a-Lon is always chosen such that LHA will be a whole number of degrees with no minutes part. At meridian passage,
LHA equals 0°. See Greenwich Hour Angle and Assumed Longitude.
Local Mean Time (LMT) — The UTC of any event observed from the Greenwich meridian. All times (sunrise, twilights, meridian passage, etc) listed in the Nautical Almanac are given in terms of LMT -
that is, they tell you what time this will happen in UTC for observers at Greenwich. To figure the actual UTC you should observe for these events from a western DR-Lon, convert your DR-Lon to time
using the Arc to Time table in the Nautical Almanac and then add this time interval to the listed LMT of the event. In east longitudes, subtract this interval from the tabulated LMT. Once you have figured
the UTC of the event this way, you can figure watch time, by reversing whatever you normally do to your watch time to figure UTC from it.
Log — A boat’s odometer, it counts miles traveled through the water by summing knotmeter signals. Logs, however, cannot detect motion of the water itself, so they tell nothing about currents present.
Taffrail or Walker (a brand name) logs are mechanical ones whose signals come from a propeller pulled at the end of a drag line about 50 ft astern. The prop turns the drag line that turns a geared clock
dial that is mounted on the stern rail, which counts the miles.
Logbook — The boat’s written record of course changes and other data pertinent to the voyage. Logbook entries should be made whenever the course changes by a consistent 5° or more, or at least once
every 4 hours, even if nothing changes.
Longitude (Lon) — Latitude and longitude are an imaginary grid used to locate positions on the earth’s surface. Longitude is the side of the grid that tells how far a place is east or west of the Greenwich
meridian. The longitude of a place is the angular distance “around” the earth from Greenwich to the place, when the earth is viewed from the top, looking down at the North Pole. Lines of constant
longitude are called meridians, and since they converge at the poles the number of miles between them decreases with increasing latitude.
At the equator, and to a good approximation throughout the tropics, 1° of longitude is 60 nmi (the same as 1° of latitude), but at higher latitudes this distance must be read from a chart or plotting sheet.
Although there is rarely any need to do so, the length of a longitude degree at some arbitrary latitude can be found with a calculator from: 1° of Lon = 60 nmi × Cos(Lat). At 48° North, there are 40 miles
to a degree of longitude. Traveling west from Greenwich, longitude is labeled west and increases until you reach 180°, and then it decreases and is labeled east. The meridian that lies 300° west of
Greenwich, for example, is called 60° East.
Lower Limb (LL) — The bottom edge of the sun or moon. The top edge of the sun or moon is called the upper limb. Most sights of the sun are taken relative to the lower limb. Only when the lower limb is
obscured would one typically use the upper limb for the sun. For moon sights, we must use whatever limb is full at the time.
Lower Transit — The time a celestial body crosses a longitude equal to your longitude plus 180°—in a sense, the exact opposite of meridian passage. This time and concept have little practical application in
celestial navigation, other than the application to circumpolar stars discussed under meridian passage. Upper transit, on the other hand, is just another name for meridian passage.
Lunar Distance — The procedure of finding longitude and UTC by measuring the angular distance between the moon and another celestial body. Sights taken for lunar distance are called lunars. With care
and practice, one can find UTC in this manner to within about 30s of time, sometimes better, more often not quite that good. The sights are difficult, even on land, and must be accurate, along with
accurate index correction. There are several procedures for solving the special sight reduction. The Nautical Almanac stopped printing the required tables in 1905, but navigation historian Bruce Stark
published a modern set with instructions called Stark Tables for Clearing the Lunar Distance and Finding Universal Time by Sextant Observation (Starpath Publications, 2010). There are excellent lunar
distance resources online for those who wish to practice this.
Magnitude — A logarithmic scale for the brightness of celestial bodies. The smaller the magnitude number, the brighter the object, so negative magnitudes mean very bright objects. There are 20 magnitude-
one stars (the brightest stars), about 70 magnitude-two stars (two to three times fainter than the first group, about as bright as an average Big Dipper star), about 200 magnitude-three stars (about six times
fainter than the first group, similar to stars in the Little Dipper), and about 500 magnitude-four stars (about 16 times fainter than the bright guys). On a reasonably clear night in Seattle one can see
magnitude-four stars. In navigation we use almost exclusively first and second magnitude stars. The planets are typically brighter than the stars by as much as 1 to 4 magnitudes. The magnitudes of planets
are listed on the Nautical Almanac daily pages, but to find star magnitudes you must look in the back of the Nautical Almanac, in the special star lists.
Mars — One of the five planets visible to the naked eye (Jupiter, Venus, Mercury, Saturn, and Mars). Usually Mars is not particularly bright, so is not special for navigation, but it does go through periods
every few years of being very bright, as in mid 2003. Mars usually appears reddish when viewed through binoculars. All planets appear as tiny disks when viewed through binoculars, as opposed to stars
which are always points of light.
Mercury — One of the five planets visible to the naked eye (Jupiter, Venus, Mercury, Saturn, and Mars). Mercury is not used for navigation. It is usually too close to the sun; so it is rarely more than a few
degrees above the horizon at sunset or sunrise, and we try to avoid low sights when possible due to refraction uncertainties. The Almanac will often discuss Mercury in the Planet Diagram discussion
section, but usually just a warning of when it might be confused with Venus, etc.
Meridian — Any line at constant longitude. Special ones are the Greenwich meridian (the reference line), the International Date Line (where west turns to east), and your local meridian which marks the high
point in the arc of all celestial bodies as they pass. The corresponding name for a constant latitude line is a “parallel” of latitude.
Meridian Angle (t) — An equivalent, but less convenient way to measure the local hour angle (LHA), which is used in a few navigation publications, but not this one. It is the number of longitude degrees
between the assumed position and the geographical position, measured either East or West of the assumed longitude (a-Lon). It is defined as: t = GHA - a-Lon. If t is negative (-) the body is east of the
observer (t-East); if positive (+), the body is west of the observer (t-West).
Meridian Passage (mer pass) — The moment any celestial body crosses over your longitude line (meridian), bearing precisely due north or south. A body approaching your meridian from the east will have
a large LHA (local hour angle) that reaches 360° and starts over at 0° just as it crosses the meridian at its peak height in the sky. Meridian passage of the sun is called local apparent noon. Meridian
passage of other bodies do not have a special name, although looking north, meridian passage of circumpolar stars crossing your meridian over the top Polaris headed west are described as upper transit (at
their peak height in the sky), whereas those crossing the meridian below Polaris headed east (at their lowest point in the sky) are described as crossing your meridian at lower transit. Once you have found
your latitude this way (from any body, although sun is by far most common) it is plotted on the chart as a line of position and used with other sights to find a fix.
Micrometer Drum — That part of a modern sextant used to measure the minutes part of the sextant angle. The micrometer scale can usually be read to a precision of 1’ and the tenths of minutes are read
from the Vernier scale. The degrees part of the angle is read from a scale on the arc of the sextant.
Mid-Latitude — A type of rhumb-line sailing that uses the mid-latitude (Lm) defined as the average of the departure and arrival latitudes. It also refers to the center latitude on a universal plotting sheet. As
one word, midlatitudes refers to the region on earth between the tropics and the polar regions.
Minutes Boxes — Starpath course jargon for the Increments and Corrections Tables in the Nautical Almanac. See Increments and Corrections.
Name — The label (north or south) of latitudes and declinations. See Same Name and Contrary Name.
NAO Tables — Originally a nickname, now in essence the official name, for the Nautical Almanac Office’s Concise Sight Reduction Tables, which are included in each edition of the Nautical Almanac.
These 20 pages can reduce any sight, but the process is a bit longer than using inspection tables such as Pub. 249 or 229, which are typically several volumes each of large books.
Nautical Almanac — The annual government publication that tabulates the locations of all celestial bodies each second of the year. It also includes correction tables for sextant sights and related data.
Commercial reproductions of the government edition are also available. The official government editions (a joint US and UK publication) has an orange hard cover with black spine; a popular commercial
edition has an all blue paper cover.
Nautical Charts — Maps of the waterways, from lakes to entire oceans, designed specifically for marine navigation. Charts of American waters are published by NOS, a division of NOAA; charts of foreign
waters are from NGA. See www.starpath.com/getcharts
Nautical Mile (nmi) — A unit of distance equal to a latitude change of 1’ at constant longitude. Cape Flattery is at latitude 48° N, San Francisco is at 38° N. It is 10° south, so it must be 600 nmi south. A
nautical mile is very nearly 6,000 ft long, which makes it about 15% longer than a statute mile. The official definition (required because the earth is not strictly round) is 1 nmi = 1852 meters, exactly. To
figure the precise length of a nmi in other units, start with 1852 meters, then 1 meter equals 100 centimeters, and then use the official definition of an inch as 2.54 centimeters, exactly. In navigation, miles
means nautical miles.
Nautical Twilight — That time of day, listed in the Nautical Almanac, when the horizon fades into or out of darkness. In the morning it marks the end of night when star sights begin; in the evening, it marks
the beginning of night when star sights end. See Civil Twilight and Local Mean Time.
Navigational Stars — The 57 stars listed on the daily pages of the Nautical Almanac, also listed in the Index of Selected Stars on page xxxiii of the Almanac.
Navigational Triangle — The sight reduction process we use in cel nav is based on this triangle drawn on the earth’s surface. You do not, however, need to know anything at all about this triangle to do
celestial navigation and do it well. See Section 10.6.
Observed Height (Ho) — The final, fully corrected sextant height. It is figured by applying the altitude corrections to the apparent height (Ha), or Ho = Ha + altitude corrections. The observed height is the
true height of the body in that the distance to the geographical position (called the zenith distance of the body) can be found from it: zenith distance = 90° - Ho. See Apparent Height, Sextant Height, and
Altitude Corrections.
Parallax — The difference in the apparent position of an object viewed from different locations. See Section 10.2. See also Horizontal Parallax.
Parallel — A line of constant latitude, special ones are the equator, which separates north from south latitudes, the tropics (at 23.4° North and South) that mark the limits of the sun’s north and south
excursions, and the polar circles (at 90° - 23.4° North and South) that mark the latitudes above which it is possible for the sun to stay above or below the horizon for more than 24 hours.
In this usage, a parallel of latitude is analogous to a meridian of longitude.
Parallel can, of course, also refer geometrically to two lines in a plane that never intersect, or two planes in space that never touch.
Parallel Plotter — A plotting tool that does the same job as parallel rulers by rolling without sliding, sometimes called a Weems plotter. They are convenient for work at home or on large chart tables, but
must often be backed up with parallel rulers at sea, because they can’t reach the edges of the chart and they often slip when used on folded charts. See Parallel Rulers.
Parallel Rulers — A plotting tool used to draw a line on a chart parallel to another line located elsewhere on the chart. One application is transferring a course direction from the compass rose to your present
position; another is to lay off the azimuth line from the assumed position when plotting celestial lines of position. Parallel rulers come in various lengths, although 15 inches is about optimum in most
small chart table applications.
Pilot Charts — Monthly charts of the oceans used for voyage planning. They include prevailing winds and currents, isobars of average pressures, magnetic variation, gale frequencies, shipping lanes,
traditional sailing routes (although they tend to be more downwind than required by modern yachts), and limits of ice flow where applicable. British Pilot Charts are similar to the American ones. Some
Pilot Charts can now be downloaded online. See www.starpath.com/navpubs.
Piloting — Keeping track of position relative to charted landmarks. Piloting techniques include magnetic bearings, natural ranges, various methods of finding distance off, depth sounding, and radio direction
finding. Piloting should be distinguished from dead reckoning, which is navigation by instruments alone, without reference to charted landmarks. Celestial navigators with a sextant at hand can do very
accurate piloting by measuring vertical and horizontal angles between landmarks. See Sextant Piloting and Shipping Lanes.
Planet Diagram — A diagram in the front of the Nautical Almanac that shows the locations of planets throughout the day relative to the location of the sun and how this evolves during the year. It takes some
practice to learn to use this diagram, but worth it if you care for an overview of planet positions throughout the year. For any given day, on the other hand, you can simply do a sight reduction to get a
planet’s height and bearing.
Planets — In celestial navigation this means the visible planets Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn. Mercury is also visible to the naked eye at times, but always too low to be used for sights. Mercury data are
not given in the Nautical Almanac. Only Venus and Jupiter have special significance to celestial navigation. Because of their extreme brightness their sights can be taken during the brightest part of
twilight with a daylight horizon, which makes them accurate sights that are easy to do. Every 16 years or so, Mars becomes unusually bright (even brighter than Jupiter) and then enters the Venus-Jupiter
category of special value.
Plotting — The third and final step to finding a fix from celestial sights, the first two being the sextant sight and the sight reduction. The sight reduction leaves you with the four numbers in work form, Box 6
(a-Lat, a-Lon, Zn, and a-value). These four numbers constitute the line of position (LOP) that this one sight has provided. This LOP is then plotted on a plotting sheet using dividers and parallel rulers or
protractor. Your boat is located somewhere on this LOP.
The procedure is to plot a point at the assumed position (a-Lat, a-Lon). Then through this point draw the azimuth line in the direction of Zn. The LOP is perpendicular to this azimuth line, at a distance (in
nautical miles) from the assumed position equal to the a-value. When the a-value is labeled “T,” the LOP is on the side of the assumed position “Toward” the Zn direction; when a-value is labeled “A,” it
is on the other side of the assumed position, “Away” from the Zn direction. The perpendicular is best drawn using the cross lines printed on the protractor. See Assumed Position, Altitude Intercept (a-
value), and Azimuth (Zn).
Plotting Sheet — A blank chart of the ocean used for plotting celestial lines of position and a DR track. Government issues come with the proper grid for various latitudes, and you draw in the longitudes.
These plotting sheets for specific latitudes are, however, rather hard to come by, fairly expensive, and too large for typical small-craft chart tables. A better alternative is the universal plotting sheets which
can be used for any latitude. See Universal Plotting Sheets.
Polaris — The North Star, a magnitude-two star located 48’ off the true celestial pole of the northern sky (2019 declination N 89° 20’), at the tip of the handle of the Little Dipper. The sextant height of
Polaris is equal to your latitude to within 1° with no further corrections. The Nautical Almanac explains how to remove this uncertainty to find latitude more precisely—which is the only actual cel nav
procedure explained in that book. See Polaris Corrections and Latitude by Polaris.
Polaris Corrections (a0, a1, a2) — Corrections given at the back of the Nautical Almanac used to find latitude from Polaris, a technique that is similar to finding latitude from the sun at local apparent noon.
The largest correction (a0) accounts for the position of Polaris on its circle about the pole, and the other two account for the shape of the earth and slight motions of the polar axis and Polaris. See Polaris
and Latitude by Polaris.
Precomputation — The process of predicting the heights and bearings of celestial sights before the sight session, and then choosing the best objects to use. This is the standard way to do star sights and also
recommended for sights of Venus and Jupiter, even though they are bright and easy to find. With precomputed sights, you set the sextant to the predicted height, look in the predicted direction, and the star
will appear in view near the horizon. To complete the sight, bring it in line with the horizon and record watch time and sextant height. Star precomputation can be done with Pub. No. 249, Vol. 1, or with
the 2102-D Star Finder that has the advantage of showing the best star-planet combination to use. Precomputation can also be done by standard sight reduction when you already know what sights you
want. This is best done with a calculator, however, if you have many sights to precompute. See Pub. No. 249, Vol.1, Star Finder, Calculators, and Sextant Sights.
Protractor — A plotting tool used to lay off angles or mark azimuths when plotting lines of position.
The compass rose on any chart or plotting sheet is just a permanent protractor that you use with parallel rulers. See Compass Rose and Plotting.
Pub. 229 — Sight Reduction Tables for all celestial bodies, presented in volumes of 15º of Lat each. Official editions are large, hardbound, maroon volumes, with answers given to the nearest 0.1’, although
this extra precision requires an extra step in the d-correction to the calculated height (Hc). The layout is slightly different from Pub. 249, but the basic use of the tables are the same except for the d-
correction step at the end. These do not go out of date. If you find some in a used bookstore or swap meet for a good price, they will do the job just fine.
Pub. 249, Vol. 1 — A special volume of the Pub. 249 Sight Reduction Tables (with a red spine tape) that is used for precomputing star sights and then for sight reduction of these sights. Unlike Vols. 2 and 3,
however, this volume must be purchased every 5 years, because the star positions change slightly over the years.
Pub. 249, Vols. 2 and 3 — Sight Reduction Tables (white (v2) and blue (v3)) for sun, moon, and planets, and any star with declination less than 30°, north or south. The answers are given to the nearest
whole minute, which implies a precision of 0.5’. This precision limit, however, will rarely place a limitation on the practical accuracy of a typical celestial fix. A sharp pencil and correction for boat
motion are more important. Vol. 2 covers north or south latitudes of 0° to 40°; Vol. 3 covers 39° to 89°.
These do not go out of date. If you find some in a used bookstore or swap meet for a good price, they will do the job just fine.
Refraction — In cel nav, this describes the bending of light rays as they enter the earth’s atmosphere. The effect takes place because the light ray is traveling from the vacuum of space into the atmosphere,
which slows down the light wave. An analogy is shown online at http://davidburchnavigation.blogspot.com/2012/05/refraction-in-sink.html. The effect makes all sextant angles too large, although the
correction is very small except for low sights. Sights near the horizon have a maximum refraction of about 35’, but at heights of only 10° the refraction has dropped to 5’; at 5° it increases to 10’. At a
sextant height of 40° the correction is only 1’. All sights must be corrected for refraction, which is included in the Nautical Almanac under the general name altitude correction. Recall that very roughly a
1’ sextant angle error translates into a 1 nmi error in a fix, so small corrections do matter. For heights above 6°, the refraction correction is nearly equal to 60’ divided by the sextant height in degrees. The
Almanac refraction values can be reproduced with the Bennett formula: R = cot[Ha + 7.31/(Ha + 4.4)] for T= 10º C and P = 1010 mb. Correct for temperature and pressure by multiplying by (P/1010)
(283/(273+T). See Altitude Corrections.
Rhumb Line (RL) — The straight line between two points on a standard nautical chart (Mercator projection). The true course direction remains constant along a rhumb-line route, although the magnetic
course direction changes as the variation does. See Great Circle Route.
Right Ascension (RA) — An alternative to sidereal hour angle (SHA) for labeling star longitudes on a star globe. It is used by astronomers and some star maps but rarely by navigators. It uses time units
instead of angle units and runs backward relative to SHA. A star with SHA 300° would have an RA equal to (360° - 300°) × (1 hour/15°) = 4h 00m 00s. The 2102-D uses RA, but this is all sorted out in
The Star Finder Book. If you have a star map marked in RA, you can convert it to SHA as: SHA = (24h - RA) × 15°.
Rocking the Sextant — A motion of the sextant that must be done when taking a sight to ensure that the proper vertical height of the object is measured. “Rocking” means rotating the sextant, without
moving the head, about an imaginary line from your eye to the image of the object on the horizon. For actual sights, you need to rock very little, about 20° or so, to either side, but it is good to practice
rocking even farther to begin with as this teaches you how to keep the object in view on a moving boat. As you rock the sextant you must willfully keep it pointed toward the object, since the tendency is
to rotate as you rock (yawl as you roll). As you rock, the image will appear to move along an arc. You want the object to just touch the horizon at the lowest point of the arc. Achieve this by adjusting the
micrometer as you rock the sextant. See Sextant and Sextant Sight.
Running Fix (rfix) — The procedure of finding a fix from two sights taken at different times when the boat is moving. At the time of the second sight, you will have moved off of the first line of position
(LOP); so it must be corrected before it can be crossed with the second LOP to get a fix. The only exception is a first sight taken of an object precisely on the beam, then no course changes till the second
sight. In this case the first LOP is your course line and your fix is simply where the second LOP crosses the first.
The procedure for arbitrary sights and course changes between sights is to plot a special, between-sights DR track of the distance run and all course changes made between the two sights, starting at any
point on the first LOP. Generally it is best to plot this track from a far end of the LOP, away from your main DR plot. Then use parallel rulers to advance the first LOP to the end of this between-sights DR
track. The running fix is the intersection of the second LOP with the advanced first LOP. See Advanced LOP.
Same Name — Means that the label (north or south) of a sighted body’s declination is the same as your DR-Lat. A star with declination S 56° has “Same Name” if you are at any south latitude when you did
the sight, otherwise it is called “Contrary Name.” See Name and Contrary Name.
Saturn — One of the five planets visible to the naked eye (Jupiter, Venus, Mercury, Saturn, and Mars). Saturn is rarely as bright as the brightest stars; so its main role in navigation is to confuse us by
appearing as a star where no star should be. There, of course, will be exceptions, and we will be very happy to have Saturn right where it is for a nice combination of star-planet sights. It is an outer planet
like Jupiter and moves slowly across the stars, as opposed to Venus and Mercury, which move much more quickly.
Semidiameter (SD) — One half of the angular width of the sun or moon. This width is accidentally about the same for the sun and moon at about 16’ on the average. The moon is much smaller than the sun,
but it is also much closer; its semi-diameter is coincidentally about the same as the sun’s. The SD of sun and moon both vary with time since their distances from us change with orbital position. Normally,
half the diameter of a circle is called its radius, but because of refraction, the apparent shape of the sun or moon, especially when low in the sky, is not a circle but an ellipse. Half of an ellipse is called its
semi-diameter. Perhaps that is a source of this terminology, since the term was first used as a correction, but the value tabulated is not related to that. It is a geometric factor determined by the distance to
the sun. Because of refraction, however, if you wish to measure the SD, it should be done when the sun is above 30º high. See Refraction and Solar Method of IC.
Set — The true direction toward which a current flows. Pilot charts plot ocean currents. There are also world maps showing currents in Bowditch, along with a discussion of the currents. Best data come from
modern ocean model predictions. See Drift.
The word “set” is often used to refer to the difference between a vessel’s heading and its actual course over ground. If I am steering 200 and making good a course of 215, then I am getting set 15° to the
right. This latter common usage is more parlance than official terminology.
Sextant — A device used to measure the angular heights of celestial bodies above the horizon. It can also be used for coastal piloting to find distance off from the angular heights of landmarks with charted
elevations. The inherent precision of top-line metal models (costing $600 to $3,000) is about 0.2’ or so, but this does not mean any single sight will be this accurate. Even highly experienced navigators
will get variations of up to 1.0’ in a series of nominally identical sights. Consequently, to approach a fix accuracy equivalent to the quality of a good sextant, several sights must be taken and then
averaged. Plastic sextants have a lower inherent precision, 1’ to 2’, with even higher variations within a series of sights. Nevertheless, celestial fixes to within 3 or 4 miles accuracy can still be achieved
with a plastic sextant by averaging many sights and checking the index correction frequently (See Section 11.18 on use of plastic sextants).
The sextant was invented by Sir Issac Newton in the mid 1700’s. Early models used a Vernier scale, which was replaced with more convenient micrometer drums some time in the 1930’s. Important
features to look for are large mirrors, a wide, unobstructed field of view, with lighted arc and micrometer. An optimum all-purpose telescope is about a 4 × 40. The most popular sextant worldwide is the
Astra IIIb, which marks a peak in performance per dollar. These are made in China. Top quality metal sextants are made also by Freiberger (German) and Tamaya (Japan). See Sextant Sights, Accuracy,
Vernier, Index Correction, and Side Error.
Sextant arc — The bottom circumference of the sextant frame. The degrees scale is usually attached or engraved into the arc of the sextant. Sextant accuracy is not dependent on the arc scale itself, but rather
on the precise spacing of the notches on the bottom of the arc that engage the worm gear.
Sextant Height (Hs) — The actual sextant reading at the time of a sextant sight, without any corrections applied. The degrees part is read from the sextant arc; the minutes part from the micrometer drum.
Modern sextants give these angles in degrees, minutes, and tenths of a minute; older sextants are marked in degrees, minutes, and seconds. The Hs angle itself is the one between the two lines of sight,
eye-to-horizon and eye-to-star. See Sextant Sight, High-Altitude Sights, and Rocking the Sextant.
Sextant Sight — The process of measuring the sextant height of a celestial body and recording the watch time of the measurement to the second. Once the object and horizon are both in view (achieved in sun
sights by just hunting around the arc, or in star sights by precomputation or by inverting the sextant), the sight is completed by adjusting the micrometer until the object just skims the horizon while
rocking the sextant.
Log readings should be recorded before and after each sight session, to identify the sight or to use later in a running fix.
Whenever possible, sextant sights should be of objects higher than 15° and lower than 75°. Lower sights are less accurate due to refraction uncertainties, and higher sights require special sight reduction
techniques. Within these limits, sun sights can be taken any time of day, but star sights are typically limited to the period between civil and nautical twilight when it is dark enough to see the stars, yet not
too dark to see the horizon. Checking the index correction is an important part of any sight session. Sun sights require no preparation, but star or planet sights should be precomputed before the sight
session. See Index Correction, High-Altitude Sights, Precomputation, Rocking the Sextant, and Inverting the Sextant.
Sextant Piloting — The process of using a sextant to measure vertical angles (i.e., height of a hill or bridge clearance) or horizontal angles (i.e., width of an islet or bay entrance, or distance between two
landmarks) to find a distance off or position on a chart. Sextant piloting is the most accurate means of piloting, so much so that it is often called surveying. Examples are given in the book How to Use
Plastic Sextant: With Applications to Metal Sextants and a Review of Sextant Piloting.
Shipping Lanes — The great-circle routes between major ports that are followed by marine traffic at sea. They are shown on pilot charts. Crossing them, keep special watch for traffic; in an emergency, they
are the best bet for finding help. See Pilot Charts.
Shooting a Star — Parlance for taking a sextant sight of a star.
Side Error — A sextant misalignment that affects the view through the telescope but not the measured height. Side error is present when the two mirrors (horizon and index) are not perpendicular to the arc
of the sextant. On a traditional sextant with half-silvered horizon glass, this error causes the image to jump from one side of the glass to the other as you scan the object with the sextant set to 0° 0’. It will
also cause a smooth horizon to split apart as you rock the sextant, which is a good way to detect even a small side error independent of index error.
On full-view sextants, side error shows up as a light blue smear to one side of a distant object with a light yellow smear to the other side when the sextant is set to 0°. Instruction manuals (or Bowditch)
tells how to remove this error with the adjustment screws at the mirrors. See Index Correction, Bowditch, and Full-View Sextants.
Sidereal Hour Angle (SHA) — The name of a star’s longitude on a star globe, it is how far the star is west of the Aries meridian. The location of a star on the star globe or in the sky is given by its
declination and SHA just as points on earth are located with latitude and longitude. The SHAs and declinations of individual stars remain essentially constant throughout the years. See Aries and
Declination.
Sight — See Sextant Sight.
Sight Reduction — The book and paperwork of celestial navigation. It is the intermediate step to finding a fix from celestial sights; the first step is the sight itself, the last step is plotting the lines of position.
Using Starpath work forms, sight reduction begins in work form, Box 1 with the sextant height (Hs) and watch time (WT) of a particular sight. Using the Nautical Almanac and Sight Reduction Tables, it
ends with the four numbers in work form, Box 6 (a-Lat, a-Lon, Zn, and a-value) that are used to plot the line of position. Once the procedures and work forms are familiar, the process takes about 15
minutes using tables. The same process can be completed with a programmed calculator in about 1 minute. In either case, the key to good sight reduction is to double-check yourself at each stage.
Blunders will usually stand out, but not until near the end of the process. See Work Forms, Calculators, Nautical Almanac, and Sight Reduction Tables.
Sight Reduction Tables — Required books for celestial navigation that last indefinitely as they are just tables of mathematical solutions to the navigational triangle. There are several styles available, the
most popular amongst sailors are Pub. 249 Vols. 2 and 3 (used in this course). The set called Pub. 229 is used on USCG exams and by the Navy. For backup or a viable alternative for your primary tables,
the NAO Tables are the best bet. Regardless of the table style, however, all do the same job: you tell the tables three numbers (LHA, Dec, and a-Lat) and the tables tell you two numbers (Hc and Zn).
Programmed calculators will do what these tables do, but you still need some set of tables on board to backup the calculator. See Pub. 249, Pub. 229, NAO Tables, Navigational Triangle, and Calculators.
Solar Method of IC — Using the alignment of upper and lower limbs of the sun to measure the index correction, which measures the SD of the sun as a check. See Section 11.7.
Solstices — The 2 days of the year when the “sun stands still” over one of the two tropics as it turns from an increasing to a decreasing declination. In northern latitudes, these are the longest day of the year
(June 21 with the sun at declination N 23.4°) and the shortest day of the year (December 21 with the sun at declination S 23.4°). These 2 days mark the maximum excursion of the sunrise and sunset off of
due east and west. The exact date when the declination is maximum can change slightly from year to year. See Amplitude and Equinoxes.
Speed Over Ground (SOG) — A GPS computed value of your speed relative to the fixed earth taking into account all factors that affect your motion. See also Course Over Ground.
Standard Time — The time system that uses time zone boundaries marked by government and geographical considerations, such as Pacific Standard Time and Eastern Standard Time. Each time zone is
roughly 15° of longitude wide, but large discrepancies can be found. Places that switch from standard time to daylight saving time, change the zone description of their time zone by 1 hour during the
summer half of the year. The standard time zone that applies to a particular place (and whether they switch to daylight saving time) can be looked up in the back of the Nautical Almanac, but there is no
practical navigational need to know this—other than helping a thirsty navigator guess whether the Pioneer Inn in Lahaina, or equivalent stations around the world, might still be open when you arrive. See
Universal Time, Watch Time, Zone Time, and Zone Description.
Star Finder — Meaning the 2102-D Star Finder or the equivalent British version called NP 323, it is a plastic device that can predict angular heights and bearings of all celestial bodies to within a few
degrees, at any time, from any place on earth. Its primary use is for identifying unknown stars in partly cloudy skies, although it has many other valuable applications such as precomputation for star
sights, planning running fixes, and calling the best time of day for sun-moon fixes. The device is explained in detail in The Star Finder Book. See Precomputation and Star Finder book.
Summer Triangle — A prominent right triangle of three bright stars, each from a different constellation, that often appears over head in the northern summer as the first visible stars. Deneb, at the head of the
Northern Cross (Cygnus), together with Vega and Altair make up a prominent right triangle, which is led across the sky by the brilliant Vega at the right angle. See extended discussion in Emergency
Navigation by David Burch
Sun line — A line of position obtained from a sextant sight of the sun. “Take a sun line,” means do a sun sight, reduce it, and plot it. Similar use for star line, moon line, etc. Sometimes written as “sunline.”
See Sextant Sight.
Sunrise — The moment the top edge (upper limb) of the sun first appears on the visible horizon. This time depends on your latitude and the date and is listed every 3 days in the Nautical Almanac. See Local
Mean Time, and Civil and Nautical Twilights.
Sunset — The moment the top edge (upper limb) of the sun disappears below the visible horizon. This time depends on your latitude and the date and is listed every 3 days in the Nautical Almanac. See Local
Mean Time, and Civil and Nautical Twilights.
The Star Finder Book — A recommended supplement to this book. It covers all aspects and usage of the 2102-D Star Finder as well as many tips on star and planet motions and identification.
Time Zone — Most generally speaking, this means a geographical region within which the same time is used. The time system in use, however, can be either a “zone time,” more common for navigation, or a
“standard time,” which is more common for daily use outside of navigation — although there are no hard and fast rules for practical navigation. In the end, we need to know UTC, and it does not matter at
all what time system we work with so long as we can in an error-free manner always know UTC. See Zone Time, Standard Time, and UT.
Transit — In astronomy and celestial navigation, it means the same as meridian passage. See Meridian Passage, Upper Transit, and Lower Transit. In England, the word “transit” is used in coastal navigation
as we use “range.” Transit is also the name of the present satellite navigation system.
Tropics — Has two meanings: tropics, the specific latitudes of 23.4° S (the Tropic of Capricorn) and 23.4° N (the Tropic of Cancer) or tropics, the region on earth between these two latitudes. The tropics
span the latitude range of the sun’s geographical position. At each latitude within the tropics the sun will appear directly overhead twice a year. Outside of the tropics the sun will never reach a height of
90°. The tropics are the latitudes of the sun’s declination on the solstices. The Equator is the latitude of the sun’s declination on the equinoxes. See Declination, Solstices, and Equinoxes.
Twilight — In general use, that time period between daylight and darkness. It is used more precisely in celestial navigation since star sights must be taken during this period. Twilight times in navigation refer
to specific times of day, not to time periods. See Civil Twilight and Nautical Twilight.
Universal Plotting Sheets — Blank charts of the ocean with latitude lines spaced 3 inches apart and no longitude lines shown. The longitude lines must be drawn in by the navigator using a universal scale
provided on each sheet. This way the proper grid can be set up to match any latitude. Near the equator, 1° grids are nearly square; at higher latitudes they are rectangular. They come in pads of 50 sheets,
printed both sides, which cost about $10. The implied scale is 3 inches equals 60 miles, but any scale can be used by re-labeling the latitude lines and adjusting the longitude diagram accordingly. For
accurate celestial fixes, it is usually necessary to expand the scale to 3 inches equals 6 miles.
Your DR track can also be plotted on these same sheets, making it your primary chart for the open ocean part of the voyage. They are also useful for weather plotting and tactics.
Universal Time (UT, UTC, UT1) — The international time system used in navigation that used to be called Greenwich Mean Time (GMT). You will see this abbreviated in various references as UT, UTC,
and UT1. The Nautical Almanac prints “UT” on the daily pages where it used to print GMT. Technically, GMT = UT1, which is tied to the rotation rate of the earth, whereas UTC is an absolute clock
time independent of the earth. These two differ by at most 0.9s, as the rotation rate of earth changes slightly with time. The two are synchronized about once a year with the adjustment of a leap second to
UT1. Although interesting in their own right, these details have little significance to practical celestial navigation in a small boat at sea. See links to time references at www.starpath.com/celnavbook.
Update the DR Plot — Jargon that means transfer your course changes from the logbook to the plotting sheet, so that you can determine your present DR position. The chart and plotting work of dead
reckoning. In practice, this process can take more time than the actual sights and sight reductions. It can be done more efficiently and accurately using a programmed calculator that does dead reckoning.
See Dead Reckoning, DR Plot, DR Position, Logbook, Plotting Sheets, and Calculators.
Upper Limb (UL) — The top edge of the sun or moon, used for sun sights when the lower limb is obscured by clouds. For moon sights, we use what ever limb is full at the time. See Lower Limb and Semi-
diameter.
Upper Transit — Same as meridian passage. The moment any celestial body crosses your meridian, bearing precisely due north or south. See Meridian Passage.
USNO — United States Naval Observatory (usno.navy.mil). See especially their Astronomical Applications department that has many wonderful resources for celestial navigators. See
www.starpaath.com/usno.
v-correction — The correction given in the Nautical Almanac that accounts for the changing rate of the GHA motion of the moon and planets. See v-value.
v-value — A number given in the Nautical Almanac that is used to correct the Greenwich hour angles (GHAs) of the moon and planets. This correction is not needed for the sun and stars because they circle
the earth at precisely constant rates according to UTC. The stars do this because they are stationary and the earth rotates at a constant rate (15° 02.5’ of longitude per hour). The sun also does so (at a
slightly different constant rate, 15° of longitude per hour, exactly) despite its annual motion through the stars as we circle it, because UTC is defined in such a way as to make this happen. But because of
the orbital motions of the moon and planets, their GHAs do not circle the earth at constant rates, but rather vary slightly throughout the month for the moon and throughout the year for the planets.
The Nautical Almanac accounts for this variation by assigning each a constant average value (15° 00.0’ per hour for the planets and 14° 19.0’ per hour for the moon), and then lists the excess of this rate at
a particular time as the v-value. For example, if the moon’s v-value is listed as 14.0’ at a UTC of 22h 00m, it means that at this time of day, the moon’s geographical position is moving west at a rate of
14° 19.0’ + 14.0’, or 14° 33.0’ of longitude per hour. If you wanted the moon’s GHA at 22h 49m 10s, you would look up the GHA at 22h on the daily pages and then find the 49m 10s increment on the
49-minute page of the Increments and Corrections Table. This answer should be (49m 10s) × (14° 19.0’) / (60m) = (49.167/60) × (14.317) = 11.732° = 11° 43.9’, which must be added to the 22h value.
Then find in the same table the v-correction that corresponds to a v-value of 14.0’. This should be (49.5m/60m) × (14.0’) = 11.6’. Add this v-correction and you have found the proper GHA. Note that the
corrections table uses the half-minute value (49.5 instead of 49) for all times.
The v-value and subsequent v-corrections are positive in all cases except occasionally for Venus, in which case it is clearly marked in the Nautical Almanac.
Variation — The difference in bearing between true north and magnetic north. It is different for different parts of the world and changes very slowly over the years. It is clearly marked on all nautical charts
and pilot charts.
Velocity Made Good (VMG) — The speed you are making good in a particular direction. Two common choices are VMG to a waypoint and VMG relative to the true wind direction.
Venus — One of the five planets visible to the naked eye (Jupiter, Venus, Mercury, Saturn, and Mars). Jupiter and Venus are the two primary planets for navigation, because they are always brighter than the
brightest stars, and therefore their sights can be taken immediately after sunset or just before sunrise when the stars are not visible. Venus is seen in the morning or evening, never more than about 45°
from the sun. It changes from morning star to evening star about once a year. Check the Planet Diagram in the Nautical Almanac to learn how it moves in any particular year.
Vernier — The type of scale used on sextants to interpolate tenths of minutes on the micrometer drum. The Vernier scale lies adjacent to the micrometer scale, with 9 units on the micrometer scale divided
into 10 units on the Vernier scale. With this clever arrangement, you read the proper fractional part of the minutes from the Vernier scale by noting which unit of the Vernier scale most closely aligns with
any unit of the micrometer scale. Technically speaking, “Vernier scale” may be redundant, since “Vernier” does mean a type of scale, but this is obviously not an important point.
Watch Error (WE) — The difference between watch time and the standard time the watch is set to. The technical meaning is the same as the common meaning: how much any watch is fast or slow. If your
watch is set to Pacific Daylight Time (PDT), and it reads 14h 12m 20s, when you hear the proper time announced from some source to be 14h 12m exactly, then your watch error is 20 seconds fast. Since
every watch has some rate of gaining or losing time, watch error increases as a voyage progresses. The size of the watch error is not important as long as your know what it is. Watch error can be checked
underway with the WWV time broadcasts. A GPS in contact with satellites is also a dependable source of accurate time.
Watch Rate — The number of seconds a watch, or any timepiece, gains or loses per day or week. The rate of a typical quartz watch might be a gain of 3 seconds every 10 days. The size of the rate is not so
important, but it must be constant if the watch is to be useful for navigation. A watch with constant rate is called a chronometer. Most quartz watches can be adjusted to minimize the rate, but the cost
when done by a jeweler is comparable to the watch cost. See Watch Error and Chronometer Log.
Watch Time (WT) — The actual time indicated on the chronometer or wrist watch used for navigation, without any corrections, recorded to an accuracy of 1 second at the precise time of the sight. Watch
time can be kept on any time zone that is convenient, but should not be changed during a voyage. There is no particular virtue to keeping watch time set to UTC, because you must correct even this watch
time for watch error. You might as well pick a more useful time to carry around on your arm and add this correction as well when you correct for watch error. Also, you need some ship’s time that
everyone on the boat goes by for watch changes and meals. It is best if this matches your watch time; UTC is very awkward for this purpose.
Waypoint — A Lat-Lon position chosen to mark a point along a route. Under sail, the waypoints are typically determined by forecasted wind patterns.
Work Forms — Blank forms used to guide you through the steps of a sight reduction. After some practice, you can do without forms, but they help when learning or underway when its hard to think, very
sick, or very tired, or both. See Sight Reduction.
Zenith — The point in the sky directly overhead. If a star appears at an observer’s zenith, at that instant the observer is at the geographical position of that star. See zenith distance.
Zenith Distance (z) — The angular distance between the point directly overhead (the zenith) and the celestial body sighted. It is the complement of the observed height (Ho) figured from: z = 90° - Ho.
Zenith distance is a key concept in celestial navigation since it can be shown to be numerically equivalent to the distance between the observer and the geographical position (GP) of the sighted body. If a
star is 70° above the horizon, its zenith distance is 20°, and at that moment you are located precisely 20° × (60 miles/1°), or 1,200 miles from the GP. The Nautical Almanac tells precisely where the GP is
located at all times; so this observation alone has established a giant circle of position. The rest of celestial navigation covered in a sight reduction is just a trick to get a segment of this circle onto a
plotting sheet, so we can call it a line of position. See Geographical Position, Observed Height, Sight Reduction, Circle of Position, and Nautical Mile.
Zenith Passage — The moment when a star passes directly overhead, at a peak height of 90°. Any star that does this must have a declination equal to your latitude, or vice versa, if you spot a star overhead,
your latitude equals the star’s declination. Look it up (or recall it from memory), and you know your latitude. This is an emergency method of finding latitude without sextant or tables, although it takes
practice to determine whether the star was indeed at your zenith at meridian passage. If the star passes 2° north of your zenith (zenith distance of 2°), your latitude is 2° south of the star’s declination, and
so forth. See Zenith Stars and Meridian Passage.
Zenith Star — Any star that crosses your zenith (passes directly overhead), also used to describe stars that cross your destination as in “Sirius is a zenith star for Tahiti,” since you will know you are at the
right latitude when you see these guys overhead. See Zenith Passage.
Zone Description (ZD) — When referred to a watch, it is the number of whole hours between the watch time (WT) and universal time (UTC). If your watch reads 13:04:20 as you hear UTC (also called
universal coordinated time, UT or GMT) announced on the WWV broadcast as 21:04:00, then the ZD of your watch is +8 hours. You know this because you now know that you get UTC from your WT
by adding 8 hours. As long as you don’t change your watch time, this correction to the hours part will remain constant, even though the error in the seconds part of your watch time will increase as time
goes by. In the previous example, the watch error was 20 seconds fast. As long as you don’t change your watch time, UTC is your watch time, corrected for the watch error, plus 8 hours, no matter what
time of day you look at it, and no matter where on earth you are when you do look.
When referred to a place on earth (as in the zone time or standard time systems), the zone description describes the local time zone of the place, telling how many hours it differs from UTC. But in
practical navigation there is little use for this conventional definition of the term. To navigate, the only time you need to know is UTC, and to get UTC you need to know only the time zone of your watch,
not the time zone you happen to be in. Just forget that you are sailing across several time zones as you cross an ocean; it has no bearing on the important part of navigation. Midday will gradually slip an
hour or two off of 12:00, but this is no problem at all compared to the timekeeping problems you expose yourself to once you start changing your watch time. Once you get to your destination, set your
watch to their time and go on from there. See Time Zone.
Zone Time (ZT) — A time system used in commercial and government navigation that changes time zones at specific longitudes, regardless of what is going on at that place. The central time meridian of
each zone is a whole multiple of 15°, called the zone description of that zone. The boundaries of each zone are 7° 30’ of longitude to either side of the central meridian. According to the Zone Time
system, every point on earth between 127° 30’ W and 112° 30’ W keeps time that is 8 hours behind UTC (ZD = +8h, since 8 × 15 = 120°). There is no daylight saving time in this system, and it is
assumed that all ship’s clocks change by 1 hour when a time zone boundary is crossed. Zone time is like standard time with straight boundaries along specific meridians and no daylight changes. See also
Standard Time, Watch Time, and Time Zone.
Abbreviations
a a-Value
A Away
Amp Amplitude
AP Assumed Position
C Course
d d-Value
d-corr d correction to Hc
Dec Declination
DR Dead Reckoning
DR-Lat DR Latitude
DR-Lon DR Longitude
G Greenwich Meridian
GP Geographical Position
Ha Apparent Height
Hc Calculated Height
HE Height of Eye
Ho Observed Height
HP Horizontal Parallax
Hs Sextant Height
IC Index Correction
Lat Latitude
LL Lower Limb
Lm Mid-Latitude
Lon Longitude
RA Right Ascension
SD Semidiameter
t Meridian Angle
T Toward
UL Upper Limb
UT Universal time
v v-value
WE Watch Error
WT Watch Time
Z Azimuth Angle
z Zenith Distance
ZD Zone Description
Zn Azimuth
ZT Zone Time
ZD Zone Description
Appendix 2
ANSWERS
* Over the years we have learned that having this indexed list of fully worked examples is helpful for cross referencing. Please note the list is here and use it as called for. The last example
of each body is in the Instructions to using Work Form 104 in the Appendix. On the right are the page numbers.
5.4 Sun #2
5.5 Sun #3
5.6 Sun #4
5.7 Sun #5
5.8 Sight Reducing LAN Data
6.4 Answers
(1) 31° 15’ N, 143° 35’ W (Plot in Figure 6.4-1)
(2) 29º 12.1’ N, 144º 51.9’ W
(3) 30° 10’ N, 146° 37’ W
(4) 31º 18.4’ N, 145º 24.0’ W
6.5 AM Sun #6
6.5 PM Sun #7
Plot of Sun Lines #6 and #7, Advanced for a Running Fix from Exercise 6.5
6.6 Running Fix Final Answers (See Intermediate Answers for Details)
(Example) 26° 38.7’ S, 62° 58.9’ E
(1) 21° 28.1’ N, 125° 26.3’ W
(2) 27° 54.5’ N, 005° 23.2’ W
(3) 26° 43.3’ N, 135° 13.6’ E
(4) 20° 54.6’ S, 032° 57.4’ W
(5) 29° 08.7’ S, 034° 57.8’ E
Plot of Exercise 7.4, note that all scales have been increased by a factor of 2
7.5 Antares Sight, Star #4
7.6 Arcturus Sight , Star #5
9.4 Moon #1
* In this case since we are so close to 13º on the declination, we should get Z from Dec 13. In principle, however, when doing this we should always use the proper dec degrees (12 in this
case) for finding Hc, but in this case that will not matter.
9.9 Moon #4
(1b). Tabular UTC (at Greenwich) 05h 25m, Longitude 126° 32’W = (Arc to Time) 08h 26m 08s + 05h 25m 00s = 13h 51m 08s, Minus ZD (+8) = 05h
51m 08s
(1c). Tabular UTC (at Greenwich) 05h 52m, Longitude 126° 32’W = (Arc to Time) 08h 26m 08s + 05h 52m 00s = 14h 18m 08s, Minus ZD (+8) = 06h
18m 08s
(2a). Tabular UTC (at Greenwich) 18h 06m, Longitude 030° 15’ W = (Arc to Time) 02h 01m 00s + 18h 06m 00s = 20h 07m 00s, Minus ZD (+4) = 16h
07m 00s
(2b). UTC (at Greenwich) = 12h 00m 00s - (Equation of Time) 15m 58s = 11h 44m 02s, Longitude 030° 15’ W = (Arc to Time) 02h 01m 00s + 11h 44m
02s = 13h 45m 02s, Minus ZD (+4) = 09h 45m 02s
This type of cut angle question can also be solved by doing a simple sight reduction at the time of the proposed first and second sights, although when
doing it by hand this takes a long time. The process can be made much shorter by just looking at the Z column of the SR tables to see how long it takes for
Z to increase by 30 or so degrees. Then recall that each 15° of LHA is the same as 1 hr, which means each 1° of LHA is 4 minutes. Alternatively, when
using a calculator or computer it is a simple matter to just do a few sight reductions at various times to see how long you have to wait. This takes just a
minute or two.
N(v) = N(90 - 13) + N(49) = 26 + 281 = 307, so v = 47.4. N(w)=N(13)-N(90 - 47.4)=1492 - 391 = 1101, so w = 47.4 and (same name) u = 90 - 19.4 + 32 =
102.6 which is > 90, so u = 180 - 102.6 = 77.4
N(Hc) = N(90 - 44.7) + N(77.4) = 391 + 24 = 415, so Hc = 41.4°. N(Z) = N(47.4) - N(90 - 41.4) = 307 - 287 = 20, so Z = 78.7, but u > 90, so Z = 180 -
78.7 = 101.3° and Zn = 258.7. [41.40, 258.6]
N(v) = N(90 - 50) + N(49) = 442 + 281 = 723, so v = 29.0. N(w) = N(50) - N(90 - 29.0) = 267 - 134 = 133, so w = 61.1 and (same name) u = 90 - 61.1 + 20
= 48.9 N(Hc) = N(90 - 29.0) + N(48.9) = 134 + 283 = 417, so Hc = 41.3°. N(Z) = N(29.0) - N(90 - 41.3) = 724 - 286 = 438, so Z = 40.2° and Zn = 319.8.
[41.17, 319.8]
N(v) = N(90 - 20) + N(30) = 62 + 693 = 755, so v = 28.0. N(w) = N(20) - N(90 - 28.0) = 1073 - 124 = 949, so w = 22.8 and (contrary name) u = 90 - 22.8 -
12 = 55.2 N(Hc) = N(90 - 28.0) + N(55.2) = 124 + 197 = 321, so Hc = 46.5°. N(Z) = N(28.0) - N(90 - 46.5) = 756 - 374 = 382, so Z = 43.1, but since
contrary name Z = 180 - 43.1 = 136.9° and Zn = 223.1. [46.46, 223.0]
TABLE SELECTIONS
CONTENTS
The notation “T-1,” “T-2,” etc, is for easy cross reference within this book or classroom only. This notation is not used elsewhere in navigation, and it does
not appear in the Nautical Almanac. These Table Selections are available as a free pdf download from www.starpath.com/celnavbook, if it might be more
convenient to have them separate from the book.
T-1 Nautical Almanac 1978, Jul 24, 25, 26 planets and stars
T-2 Nautical Almanac 1978, Jul 24, 25, 26 sun and moon
T-3 Nautical Almanac 1978, Oct 25, 26, 27 planets and stars
T-4 Nautical Almanac 1978, Oct 25, 26, 27 sun and moon
T-5 Nautical Almanac 1981, Mar 26, 27, 28 planets and stars
T-6 Nautical Almanac 1981, Mar 26, 27, 28 sun and moon
T-7 Conversion of Arc to Time
T-8 Altitude Corrections Sun, Planets, Stars
T-9 Increments and corrections 4m and 5m
T-10 Increments and corrections 6m and 7m
T-11 Increments and corrections 48m and 49m
T-12 Increments and corrections 50m and 51m
T-13 Altitude Corrections Moon, 35° to 90°
T-14 Altitude Corrections Moon, 0° to 35°
T-15 Pub. 249, Vol 2, Lat 45, Dec (0-14), Same Name
T-16 Pub. 249, Vol 2, Lat 45, Dec (0-14), Contrary Name
T-17 Pub. 249, Vol 2, Lat 45, Dec (0-14), Contrary Name
T-18 Pub. 249, Vol 2, Lat 45. Dec (15-29) Same Name
T-19 Pub. 249, Vol 2, Lat 45, Dec (15-29), Same Name
T-20 Pub. 249, Vol 2, Lat 45, Dec (15-29), Contrary Name
T-21 Table 5. Pub. 249 Corrections to Hc for Minutes of Declination
T-22 Polaris Corrections
T-23 Pub. 249, short sections (for Exercise 6.6)
T-24 Pub. 249, short sections (for Exercise 6.6)
T-25 Pub. 249, short sections (for Exercise 6.6)
T-26 Pub. 249, short sections (for Exercise 5.8)
T-27 Starpath N(x) Table for Emergency Sight Reduction
T-28 Emergency Almanac for the Sun
T-1
T-2
T-3
T-4
T-5
T-6
T-7
T-8
T-9
T-10
T-11
T-12
T-13
T-14
T-15
T-16
T-17
T-18
T-19
T-20
T-21
T-22
T-23
T-24
T-25
T-26
T-27
T-28
Procedure
For declination, interpolate for hour and day as follows: Find Dec at 1400 (14h 00m) on Nov 6. At 00h on Nov 4 the value is S 15° 17’ and on Nov 7 it is S
16° 12’, so for 72h the increase was 55’.
The time wanted is 62h past 00h on Nov 4, so the correction is (62/72) x 55’ = 47’ and the Dec = S 15° 17’ + 47’ = S 16° 04’ at 1400 on Nov 6.
For GHA, interpolate the table for the 00h value on the proper date, add 175°, and then add the UTC converted to angle using standard Arc to Time
Conversion. If needed, subtract 360°.
Example: Find GHA at 14h 22m 13s on Nov 27. From Nov 25 to 28, the 00h value decreases from 8º 18’ to 8° 04’, or 4.7’ per day, so the 00h value on
Nov 27 is 8° 08.6’. To convert UTC to angle, use: 14h = 14h x (15°/1h) = 210°; 22m = 22m x (15’/1 m) = 330’ = 5° 30’; and 13s = 13s x (1’/4s) = 3’. So
GHA at 14h 22m 13s on Nov 27 = 8° 08.6’ + 175° + 210° + 5° 30’ + 3’ = 398° 41.6’ = 38° 41.6’.
The accuracy of the interpolated values for any year should be within 10’ in most cases. The error is primarily due to an average over the leap year
cycle. For more accurate perpetual data for sun and stars, see the Long Term Almanac by Geoffrey Kolbe.
Appendix 4
WORK FORMS
Contents
Overview of Starpath Work Forms
Sun Sights with Form 104
Moon Sights with Form 104
Star Sights with Form 104
Planet Sights with Form 104
Form 104 (2 Up)
Form 106 for NAO Tables, with Short Instructions
Form 106 for NAO Tables (2 Up)
Form 108 Combined Forms 104 and 106
Form 107 for LAN
Form 109 for Finding Index Correction by the Solar Method
NOTE: The dates and latitudes used for the examples in these form instructions are different from those we use in the book for other examples. If you want extra practice confirming
these sight reductions you will need to refer to the full sets of Sight Reduction Tables and obtain the almanac data for the times and dates listed. All of this can be downloaded from
www.starpath.com/celnavbook.
in western longitudes or
in eastern longitudes. With the proper choice of a-Lon, LHA will always be in whole degrees with no minutes left over. Record LHA in Box 4.
Choose the assumed latitude (a-Lat) as your DR-Lat rounded off to the nearest whole degree. Record a-Lat in Box 4 with a prominent N or S label.
Also record a-Lat in Box 6.
Z = Z(Dec-deg) + dZ,
where
Hs to Ho
The upper right side of the work form is used for converting the sextant altitude (Hs) to the observed altitude (Ho). Altitude corrections are inside the
covers of the Nautical Almanac. Record the dip correction and apply dip and index corr to Hs to get the apparent altitude (Ha).
Cross out the additional altitude corr space and the upper limb moon space; these do not apply to the sun.
Record the altitude correction for the sun and apply it to Ha to get Ho. Compare Hc and Ho in the space provided above Box 6. Subtract the smaller
from the larger to get the altitude intercept (a). Extra space is provided to rewrite Ho or Hc if necessary for this subtraction. Choose the label, A for Away
or T for Toward, which is beside the larger of Hc or Ho, and record the a-value and mark its label in Box 6.
Figure WF-1 Sun #9. Sight reduction of the sun using Form 104 and Pub 249. The crossed out box is for Pub 229 only.
Figure WF-2 Plot of a celestial fix from a sun and moon sight. The work form for the sun is shown in Figure WF-1. The moon sight is shown worked out on the next page in Figure WF-3.
Pub. 249 Versus Pub. 229
Although the tables are arranged differently and the values in Pub. 229 are given to a higher precision, the practical use of Pubs. 249 and 229 differs
only in the determination of the d-correction to tab Hc. In Pub. 249 this is done in one step, whereas in Pub. 229 this must be done in several steps. The
extra steps are required for the extra precision.
Figure WF-4 Star #10. Sight reduction of a star (Rigil Kentarus) using Form 104 and Pub 229. The only difference between Pub 229 and Pub 249 for this form is the box in the middle of the
form used to figure the d correction to Hc
First, record the tens and units parts of the d-value in the spaces above Box 5. From the Interpolation Table on the inside covers of Pub. 229, record the
tens and units corrections with their tabulated signs (±) in the spaces next to the d-value parts. These corrections depend on the d-value parts and on Dec-
min, which is called the declination increment in Pub. 229. Add the tens and units corrections to get the d-corr and then apply this correction to tab Hc to
get the final Hc. Also record Hc in the space above Box 6.
If (when first recording tab Hc, d, and Z) the d-value is listed with an asterisk (*), a further correction is needed for maximum precision. Proceed as
above, but also record the d-values just above and just below (d-upper and d-lower) the tabulated d-value. These are the d-values that correspond to Dec
values 1° above and below the Dec-deg recorded in Box 4. Next figure the double second difference (dsd), which equals the difference between d-upper
and d-lower, and record it. Find the dsd-correction in the small table, inset next to the tens and units corrections table. Record this small dsd correction and
add it to the tens and units correction to find the final d-corr. The dsd-corr is always positive, regardless of the sign of the tens and units corrections.
NOTE: dsd corrections are only needed for high-altitude sights, and for these you must interpolate for the azimuth angle Z as explained in the earlier
caution note. Hence an asterisk signaling a dsd correction is also your signal to interpolate for Z. Pub. 249 does not have this built-in warning.
Figure WF-5 Planet #4. Sight reduction of the Venus using Form 104 and Pub 229. The only difference between Pub 229 and Pub 249 for this form is the box in the middle of the form
used to figure the d correction to Hc
INDEX
A
accuracy
defined 203
of a sextant 158
of celestial fixes 7, 10, 174, 213
of dip short 136
of GPS 126, 129
of plastic sextants 141
of sextant sights 19, 26, 176, 214
of time 199
of watch time 135, 218
advanced LOP 75, 177, 203
Air Almanac 203
altitude correction 34–38, 36, 42, 66, 84, 88, 91, 94, 100–102, 164, 183, 186, 203
additional altitude correction 100, 203
altitude intercept (a-value). See a-value
amplitude 204
antenna 129
apparent height 34, 204
approach cone 201
arc to time conversion 31, 32
Aries 83–84, 178, 182, 204
artificial horizon 161–163
assumed latitude (a-Lat) 47, 63, 73, 80, 204
assumed longitude (a-Lon) 47, 63–64, 80, 151, 204
assumed position (AP) 49, 63, 175, 204
automatic identification system (AIS) 126
a-value 47, 49, 67, 204–205
azimuth angle (Z) 65, 119, 204, 273
azimuth line 49, 52, 70, 118, 204, 275
azimuth (Zn) 47, 204, 273
B
bearing 12, 14, 47, 49, 75, 77, 205
Big Dipper 110, 179–185, 204, 205
Bowditch 19, 43, 44, 124, 125, 137, 169, 171, 172, 173, 191, 205, 214
brightness, star and planet 164–165
C
calculated height (Hc) 66, 205
calculators 8, 10, 14, 157, 191, 205
celestial body 59, 75, 130, 165, 205
celestial navigation 2, 3, 7, 205
chronometer 6, 135, 205
chronometer log 59, 134, 135, 205, 273
circle of equal altitude 117–120, 205
circle of position 193, 205, 208, 218
circumpolar stars 180, 205
civil twilight 58, 83, 184, 205
closing suns 163
cocked hat 202
compass checks 165, 205
compass rose 9, 45, 49, 183, 205–206, 212–213
computed solutions 119, 189–190
computer navigation 44
contrary name 38, 206
course 206
course over ground (COG) 127–130, 206
cross track error (XTE) 128
D
daily pages 36, 60
Davies Tables 191, 206. See also NAO tables
daylight saving time 132, 133, 182, 216, 219
d-correction 42, 61, 65–66, 84, 94, 206, 275
dead reckoning (DR) 206
accuracy 44
ocean 147–150
plotting 9
update the DR plot 217
declination 29–30, 36–38, 60, 206
declination increment 206, 277
departure 125, 128, 158
deviation 166, 197, 205, 206
dip correction 22, 34–35, 136–137, 206
dip short 20, 136–137, 159, 161, 175
dividers 45, 47, 49, 80, 155–157, 206, 212
drift 5, 76–77, 157, 207, 214
DR position 206, 207
DR Track 207
Dutton’s 124
d-value 206
E
Easy LAN Rule 30, 39, 43, 207
ecliptic 207
electronic charting system (ECS) 129, 146, 167
electronic compasses 129
elevated pole 204, 207
ellipsoidal distance 167, 201
Emergency Navigation Card by David Burch 158, 183, 196, 271
EPIRB 207
equation of time (EqT) 32, 33, 43, 207, 241
equinox 29, 39, 43, 59, 144, 181, 182, 207, 216–217
F
fast position plotting 127
fit-slope method 106, 143, 176
fix 2, 5, 6, 174, 207
fluxgate compass 130
full-view mirror 22, 158, 207, 208, 215
G
geographical position (GP) 29, 109, 114, 115, 119, 207
global positioning system (GPS) 59, 75, 125, 126–130, 132, 157, 161, 191, 207
great circle 166–169, 189, 207, 209, 213
great circle charts 168
Greenwich hour angle (GHA) 62, 207, 208
Greenwich meridian 11, 31, 43, 113, 134, 208
H
Hawaii by Sextant by David Burch and Stephen Miller 1, 124, 148–149, 177
heading 129, 130, 165–167, 208
height 208
height of eye (He) 34, 208
helm bias 147, 149, 150
high-altitude sights 208
H.O. 2102-D. See Star Finder, 2102-D
horizon glass 20, 139, 207–208, 215
horizon mirror 139, 142, 163, 208
horizon shades 22
horizontal parallax 100, 208. See also parallax
How to Use Plastic Sextants by David Burch 139
Hydrographic Office (H.O.) 208
I
Increments and Corrections 36, 38, 61, 88, 94, 100, 208
index arm 20, 24, 141, 209
index correction (IC) 20, 33, 209
index mirror 139, 142, 163, 209
index shades 22
Inland and Coastal Navigation by David Burch 5, 76–77, 124
Institute of Navigation (ION) 124, 141
International Date Line 11, 132, 135, 211
interpolation 36, 66, 101, 127, 197
inverting the sextant 22, 207, 209
J
Jupiter 6, 58, 93–94, 97–98, 106, 209–210, 212–214, 218, 221, 234
K
knot 209
knotmeter 75, 127–128, 128, 130, 157, 209
L
latitude by Polaris 83, 88–92, 209
latitude (Lat) 11, 209
leeway 75–78, 127–128, 147, 149, 150, 206
line of position (LOP) 44, 47, 117, 118, 120, 209, 212
local apparent noon (LAN) 29, 116, 209
longitude from 144
work form 283
local hour angle (LHA) 63, 209
local mean time (LMT) 43, 58, 134, 210
local time 132
log 75, 210
taffrail 147, 210
Walker 147, 210
logbook 5, 9–10, 30, 59, 78, 125, 157–158, 199, 205–206, 209–210, 217, 273
blunders 147, 150
longitude (Lon) 11, 210
Long Term Almanac by Geoffrey Kolbe 183
lower limb (LL) 22, 33, 210
lower transit 210, 211, 216
lunar distance 124, 138, 140, 161, 183, 210
M
magnitude 164, 210, 212
Marc St. Hilaire method 8, 121
Mars 6, 66, 93–94, 107, 203, 209–210, 214, 218, 277
Mercator 11, 12, 95, 118, 131, 169–173, 189
Mercury 93, 161, 209–210, 212, 214, 218
meridian 11, 12, 13, 14, 211
meridian angle 211
meridian passage 12, 14, 29–34, 112, 113, 116, 134, 211
meridonal parts 131, 169–173
micrometer drum 10, 20, 24, 33–34, 88, 141–142, 162, 211, 214, 218
minutes boxes 211
Modern Marine Weather by David Burch 5, 124, 165, 201
N
NAO tables 157, 167, 168, 183, 186, 191–195, 211
Nautical Almanac (NA) 9, 211. See also daily pages
emergency almanac for the Sun 271
nautical charts 11, 13, 45, 205–207, 211, 213, 217
nautical mile (nmi) 11, 211
nautical twilight 58–59, 151, 184, 205, 211, 215–217, 241
navigational stars 91, 117, 164, 211
navigational triangle 119, 180, 204–205, 211, 216
navigation checklist 157–158
Navigation Foundation 124
nav station 155–157, 199
North Star. See Polaris
North Star to Southern Cross by Will Kyselka and Ray Lanterman 181
N(x) table 183, 196–197
O
observed height 30, 34, 211
opening suns 163
P
parallax 34, 35, 42, 94, 114, 212. See also horizontal parallax
parallel 12, 212
parallel plotter 157, 212
parallel rulers 9, 47, 49, 52, 78, 156, 157, 212–214
pilot charts 207, 212, 214–215, 217
piloting 5, 75, 120, 124, 206, 207, 212, 215
planet diagram 93, 209, 212, 218
planets 93–99, 212. See also individual planets
plotting 45–54, 212
plotting sheet 122, 146, 212
Polaris 179–185, 184, 211, 212, 232
corrections (a0, a1, a2) 213
latitude by 209
precomputation 10, 22, 184, 209, 213
protractor 47, 49, 52, 119, 146, 158, 205, 213
Pub. 229 121, 167, 184, 213, 275-277
Pub. 249, Vol. 1 9, 184–188, 213
Pub. 249, Vols. 2 and 3 121, 213
Pub. H.O. 208 191, 208
Pub. H.O. 211 191, 208
Pub. H.O. 214 121, 208
R
Radio Navigation Aids, Pub. 117 158
radios 3, 6, 9, 57, 59, 112, 132–133, 157, 164, 199
reduction to the meridian 43
refraction 35, 213
rhumb line 169–173, 213
right ascension 213
rocking the sextant 20, 208, 213–215
running fix 75–81, 154, 177, 214
S
sailings 169
same name 38, 211, 214
Saturn 6, 93–94, 107, 209–210, 212, 214, 218
Self-contained Celestial Navigation using HO 208 by John Letcher 159
semidiameter 35, 138, 139, 214
set 214
set and wait method 143
sextant 214
checking accuracy 158
high/low-altitude sights 193
plastic 26, 59, 139, 141–144, 159, 161, 209, 214
taking sights 141–143, 157, 162, 215
sextant height 33, 214
shipping lanes 165, 212, 215
shooting a star 215
side error 139, 139–140, 142, 162–163, 214
sidereal hour angle (SHA) 215
sight reduction (SR) 10, 215
sight reduction tables 2, 6, 22, 63, 191, 216
Small Angle Rule 120, 150
solar index correction 138, 216
solstice 29, 216
speed over ground (SOG) 127–130, 216
standard meridian 132
standard time 132–135, 216
star and planet identification 178
star clock 181–183
Star Finder, 2102-D 93, 178, 183, 186, 216
Star Finder Book by David Burch 83, 178, 213, 216
star map 8, 92, 99, 112, 181, 183, 213
Star Names Their Lore and Meaning by Richard Hinckley Allen 91
stars. See also Polaris, star map, Summer Triangle
Aldebaran 181
Alkaid 109, 110, 205
Altair 85, 86, 230
Antares 86, 231
Arcturus 85, 87, 230, 232, 239, 240
brightness 164-165
Hamal 234
leading 179
Mintaka 181
names 91
pointing stars 181
Regulus 87, 233
trailing 180
Summer Triangle 95, 180
Sumner method 8
sun line 59–70, 216, 221
sunrise, sunset 14, 57, 58, 93, 107, 113, 144, 151, 179, 183, 205, 216
symmedian point 202
T
The Stars by H. A. Rey 181
time prediction 31, 43–44, 151
time zone 14, 60, 216
tracking chart 118, 166, 200
transit 216. See upper transit, lower transit
tropics 216
twilight 58, 217
U
universal coordinated time (UTC, UT) 132–135, 151, 164, 208, 219
universal plotting sheet (UPS) 9, 122, 146, 217
upper limb (UL) 22, 33, 217
upper transit 107, 211, 217
US Coast Pilot 125, 158
USNO 124, 191, 196, 198, 217
Uttmark, Fritz 45, 121, 146
V
variation 111, 159, 165, 178, 205, 206, 212, 213, 217
v-correction 217
velocity made good (VMG) 128, 218
Venus 6, 22, 58, 66, 93–97, 148, 218
Vernier 20, 24, 26, 218
v-value 217, 275, 277
W
watch error 7, 9, 14, 59, 135, 183, 218
watch rate 135, 218
watch time (WT) 14, 134, 218
waypoints 128–130, 147, 200, 201, 218
wide area augmentation system (WAAS) 126
work forms 218, 272
WWV, WWVH 132, 164
Z
zenith distance (z) 30, 36, 218
zenith passage 218
zenith star 218
zone description (ZD) 58, 60, 132–134, 219
zone time (ZT) 132–135, 216, 219
About the Author
David Burch is a Fellow of the Royal Institute of Navigation in London and a Fellow of the Institute of Navigation, Washington, DC, from whom he
received the Superior Achievement Award for outstanding performance as a practicing navigator. He has logged more than 70,000 miles at sea including
twelve transoceanic yacht races, with several first place victories and a passage record for boats under 36 feet that lasted 16 years. He also navigated the
only American entry in the storm-ridden 1993 Sydney to Hobart Race.
On the academic side, he is a past Fulbright Scholar with a PhD in Physics. As Founding Director of Starpath School of Navigation in Seattle he has
designed courses and taken part in the teaching of marine weather and navigation for more than 30 years. He continues to work on the development of
online training materials, which are presented at www.starpath.com. Articles on special topics in navigation and weather appear at
davidburchnavigation.blogspot.com
Emergency Navigation
The Star Finder Book
Hawaii By Sextant
How to Use Plastic Sextants
GPS Backup with a Mark 3 Sextant
Starpath Celestial Navigation Work Forms