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- Help file for !Sclock
-
- Dr. Simon J. Melhuish, Wed 26th April 1995
-
- Sclock supports interactive help - run the !Help application in Apps.
-
- To start Sclock double click its icon. A window will appear. This shows the
- local sidereal time (LST) and the Sun and Moon coordinates.
-
- For correct operation you must have your timezone set correctly or Sclock
- will not use the right Universal Time. Set the summertime option in Alarm
- when appropriate rather than changing the clock by an hour.
-
- The LST depends also on your longitude. The default longitude is that of
- Jodrell Bank (-2.°3) but can be changed from the menu available over the
- Sclock window. To change the default value you must edit the "messages" file
- within the application. Shift double click on !Sclock and load "messages"
- into a text editor. Find the line with "LONG:-2.3" and change the value to
- your preferred default (east is positive).
-
- The coordinates given for the Sun and Moon are Right Acsension and
- Declination. This is the coordinate system used most often by astronomers and
- is analogous to longitude and latitude on the Earth's surface. However, in
- this case the equator is the Celestial Equator (the projection of the Earth's
- equator onto the celestial sphere) and the poles are the north and south
- celestial poles.
-
- The Sclock window is updated every second, and shows the current positions.
- If you want to see the sidereal time or positions at some other time, past or
- present, choose "Query" from the menu. This will bring up a dialogue box
- similar to the Alarm "Set clock..." dialogue. Enter your time and click on
- "Set". The Sclock window will jump to the query time. You can return it to
- normal time by clicking in the window, but it will restart itself after a few
- seconds in any case.
-
- To exit Sclock choose "Quit" from the menu.
-
- The coordinates given are not accurate to much better than a degree, and will
- probably be pretty hopeless outside of this decade. That should be accurate
- enough for finding the moon with a telescope's setting circles (but you
- hardly need that for the moon!) but don't expect to be able to predict
- ecclipses. I wrote Sclock to be able to get a quick moon position for setting
- a small radio telescope to look at it - for calibration purposes. My telscope
- beam is 8° wide so I'm not that fussed!
-
- If you have any comments or suggestions please feel free to contact me at:
-
- sjm@jb.man.ac.uk
-
- Copyright...
-
- Copyright is retained by the author, Simon J. Melhuish, but the Sclock
- application my be exchanged freely on the condition that it is not changed
- and is not sold for a profit (except by express permission of the author).
-
- Acknowledgements...
-
- The routines / formulae used in Sclock were taken from Numerical Recipes and
- the Astronomical Almanac.
-