by Anthony Barreiro » Thu Jan 23, 2014 5:06 pm
Nitpicker wrote:Anthony Barreiro wrote:Nitpicker wrote:... aligning our necks with the Earth's axis of rotation -- i.e. with an equatorially mounted head ... .
I hope you will change your avatar to illustrate your equatorially mounted head. I want to see how you've done that. I already know the angular width of your thumb at arm's length.
I'll just describe it instead. It's very easy. In the Northern Hemisphere (only above the tropics for back safety), when the Moon is up and the sky is clear, go outside, stand up straight and face South. Now lean back until the top of your head points to Polaris. Hold that backwards lean. Now, relative to your lean, rotate your head left/right until you reach the
Right Ascension of the Moon. Then tilt your head up/down until you reach the
Declination of the Moon. If doing this for prolonged periods, you will need to slowly rotate your head to the right, in order to track the Moon accurately.
BMAONE23 wrote:Of course it would be easier with the proper chaise lounge having the back reclined at the correct angle
Paddy O'Furniture says it's less stressful
Yes, a lawn chair would be much more comfortable. As a matter of fact, a reclining lawn chair and a pair of binoculars on a clear warm night is pretty close to my idea of heaven. I don't do a polar alignment of my lawn chair, however. It's not comfortable to crane my neck around to the left or right. Rather, I point the chair toward the approximate azimuth of what I'm going to be looking at, and adjust the height of the seat back so my head will be supported at the right altitude. I once saw an article in Sky and Telescope magazine about a fellow who installed the motors and hand controller from a go-to telescope into a reclining easy chair. Now that would be sweet.
[quote="Nitpicker"][quote="Anthony Barreiro"][quote="Nitpicker"]... aligning our necks with the Earth's axis of rotation -- i.e. with an equatorially mounted head ... .[/quote]
I hope you will change your avatar to illustrate your equatorially mounted head. I want to see how you've done that. I already know the angular width of your thumb at arm's length. :lol2:[/quote]
I'll just describe it instead. It's very easy. In the Northern Hemisphere (only above the tropics for back safety), when the Moon is up and the sky is clear, go outside, stand up straight and face South. Now lean back until the top of your head points to Polaris. Hold that backwards lean. Now, relative to your lean, rotate your head left/right until you reach the [i]Right Ascension[/i] of the Moon. Then tilt your head up/down until you reach the [i]Declination [/i]of the Moon. If doing this for prolonged periods, you will need to slowly rotate your head to the right, in order to track the Moon accurately.[/quote]
[quote="BMAONE23"]Of course it would be easier with the proper chaise lounge having the back reclined at the correct angle
Paddy O'Furniture says it's less stressful[/quote]
Yes, a lawn chair would be much more comfortable. As a matter of fact, a reclining lawn chair and a pair of binoculars on a clear warm night is pretty close to my idea of heaven. I don't do a polar alignment of my lawn chair, however. It's not comfortable to crane my neck around to the left or right. Rather, I point the chair toward the approximate azimuth of what I'm going to be looking at, and adjust the height of the seat back so my head will be supported at the right altitude. I once saw an article in Sky and Telescope magazine about a fellow who installed the motors and hand controller from a go-to telescope into a reclining easy chair. Now that would be sweet.