API

ERFA.DJM00Constant
DJM00

Reference epoch (J2000.0), Modified Julian Date

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ERFA.GRS80Constant
GRS80

Enum constant for the GRS80 reference ellipsoid

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ERFA.SRSConstant
SRS

Schwarzschild radius of the Sun (au) = 2 * 1.32712440041e20 / (2.99792458e8)^2 / 1.49597870700e11

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ERFA.WGS72Constant
WGS72

Enum constant for the WGS72 reference ellipsoid

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ERFA.WGS84Constant
WGS84

Enum constant for the WGS84 reference ellipsoid

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ERFA.a2afFunction
a2af(ndp, a)

Decompose radians into degrees, arcminutes, arcseconds, fraction.

Given

  • ndp: Resolution (Note 1)
  • angle: Angle in radians

Returned

  • sign: '+' or '-'
  • idmsf: Degrees, arcminutes, arcseconds, fraction

Called

  • d2tf: decompose days to hms

Notes

  1. The argument ndp is interpreted as follows:

    ndpresolution
    :...0000 00 00
    -71000 00 00
    -6100 00 00
    -510 00 00
    -41 00 00
    -30 10 00
    -20 01 00
    -10 00 10
    00 00 01
    10 00 00.1
    20 00 00.01
    30 00 00.001
    :0 00 00.000...
  2. The largest positive useful value for ndp is determined by the size of angle, the format of doubles on the target platform, and the risk of overflowing idmsf[3]. On a typical platform, for angle up to 2pi, the available floating-point precision might correspond to ndp=12. However, the practical limit is typically ndp=9, set by the capacity of a 32-bit int, or ndp=4 if int is only 16 bits.

  3. The absolute value of angle may exceed 2pi. In cases where it does not, it is up to the caller to test for and handle the case where angle is very nearly 2pi and rounds up to 360 degrees, by testing for idmsf[0]=360 and setting idmsf[0-3] to zero.

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ERFA.a2tfFunction
a2tf(ndp, a)

Decompose radians into hours, minutes, seconds, fraction.

Given

  • ndp: Resolution (Note 1)
  • angle: Angle in radians

Returned

  • sign: '+' or '-'
  • ihmsf: Hours, minutes, seconds, fraction

Called

  • d2tf: decompose days to hms

Notes

  1. The argument ndp is interpreted as follows:

    ndpresolution
    :...0000 00 00
    -71000 00 00
    -6100 00 00
    -510 00 00
    -41 00 00
    -30 10 00
    -20 01 00
    -10 00 10
    00 00 01
    10 00 00.1
    20 00 00.01
    30 00 00.001
    :0 00 00.000...
  2. The largest positive useful value for ndp is determined by the size of angle, the format of doubles on the target platform, and the risk of overflowing ihmsf[3]. On a typical platform, for angle up to 2pi, the available floating-point precision might correspond to ndp=12. However, the practical limit is typically ndp=9, set by the capacity of a 32-bit int, or ndp=4 if int is only 16 bits.

  3. The absolute value of angle may exceed 2pi. In cases where it does not, it is up to the caller to test for and handle the case where angle is very nearly 2pi and rounds up to 24 hours, by testing for ihmsf[0]=24 and setting ihmsf[0-3] to zero.

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ERFA.abMethod
ab(pnat, v, s, bm1)

Apply aberration to transform natural direction into proper direction.

Given

  • pnat: Natural direction to the source (unit vector)
  • v: Observer barycentric velocity in units of c
  • s: Distance between the Sun and the observer (au)
  • bm1: $\sqrt{1-|v|^2}$ reciprocal of Lorenz factor

Returned

  • ppr: Proper direction to source (unit vector)

Notes

  1. The algorithm is based on Expr. (7.40) in the Explanatory Supplement (Urban & Seidelmann 2013), but with the following changes:

    • Rigorous rather than approximate normalization is applied.

    • The gravitational potential term from Expr. (7) in Klioner (2003) is added, taking into account only the Sun's contribution. This has a maximum effect of about 0.4 microarcsecond.

  2. In almost all cases, the maximum accuracy will be limited by the supplied velocity. For example, if the ERFA epv00 function is used, errors of up to 5 microarcseconds could occur.

References

  • Urban, S. & Seidelmann, P. K. (eds), Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, 3rd ed., University Science Books (2013).

  • Klioner, Sergei A., "A practical relativistic model for micro- arcsecond astrometry in space", Astr. J. 125, 1580-1597 (2003).

Called

  • pdp: scalar product of two p-vectors
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ERFA.ae2hdMethod
ae2hd(az, el, phi)

Horizon to equatorial coordinates: transform azimuth and altitude to hour angle and declination.

Given

  • az: Azimuth
  • el: Altitude (informally, elevation)
  • phi: Site latitude

Returned

  • ha: Hour angle (local)
  • dec: Declination

Notes

  1. All the arguments are angles in radians.

  2. The sign convention for azimuth is north zero, east +pi/2.

  3. HA is returned in the range +/-pi. Declination is returned in the range +/-pi/2.

  4. The latitude phi is pi/2 minus the angle between the Earth's rotation axis and the adopted zenith. In many applications it will be sufficient to use the published geodetic latitude of the site. In very precise (sub-arcsecond. applications, phi can be corrected for polar motion.

  5. The azimuth az must be with respect to the rotational north pole, as opposed to the ITRS pole, and an azimuth with respect to north on a map of the Earth's surface will need to be adjusted for polar motion if sub-arcsecond accuracy is required.

  6. Should the user wish to work with respect to the astronomical zenith rather than the geodetic zenith, phi will need to be adjusted for deflection of the vertical (often tens of arcseconds), and the zero point of ha will also be affected.

  7. The transformation is the same as Ve = Ry(phi-pi/2)*Rz(pi)*Vh, where Ve and Vh are lefthanded unit vectors in the (ha,dec. and (az,el. systems respectively and Rz and Ry are rotations about first the z-axis and then the y-axis. (n.b. Rz(pi. simply reverses the signs of the x and y components.. For efficiency, the algorithm is written out rather than calling other utility functions. For applications that require even greater efficiency, additional savings are possible if constant terms such as functions of latitude are computed once and for all.

  8. Again for efficiency, no range checking of arguments is carried out.

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ERFA.af2aMethod
af2a(s, ideg, iamin, asec)

Convert degrees, arcminutes, arcseconds to radians.

Given

  • s: Sign: '-' = negative, otherwise positive
  • ideg: Degrees
  • iamin: Arcminutes
  • asec: Arcseconds

Returned

  • rad: Angle in radians

Notes

  1. The result is computed even if any of the range checks fail.

  2. Negative ideg, iamin and/or asec produce a warning status, but the absolute value is used in the conversion.

  3. If there are multiple errors, the status value reflects only the first, the smallest taking precedence.

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ERFA.anpFunction
anp(a)

Normalize angle into the range 0 <= a < 2pi.

Deprecated

Use Base.mod2pi instead.

Given

  • a: Angle (radians)

Returned

  • Angle in range 0-2pi
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ERFA.anpmMethod
anpm(a)

Normalize angle into the range -pi <= a < +pi.

Given

  • a: Angle (radians)

Returned

  • Angle in range +/-pi
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ERFA.apcgMethod
apcg(date1, date2, ebpv, ehp)

For a geocentric observer, prepare star-independent astrometry parameters for transformations between ICRS and GCRS coordinates. The Earth ephemeris is supplied by the caller.

The parameters produced by this function are required in the parallax, light deflection and aberration parts of the astrometric transformation chain.

Given

  • date1: TDB as a 2-part...
  • date2: ...Julian Date (Note 1)
  • ebpv: Earth barycentric pos/vel (au, au/day)
  • ehp: Earth heliocentric position (au)

Returned

  • astrom: Star-independent astrometry parameters:
    • pmt: PM time interval (SSB, Julian years)
    • eb: SSB to observer (vector, au)
    • eh: Sun to observer (unit vector)
    • em: Distance from Sun to observer (au)
    • v: Barycentric observer velocity (vector, c)
    • bm1: $\sqrt{1-|v|^2}$ Reciprocal of Lorenz factor
    • bpn: Bias-precession-nutation matrix
    • along: unchanged
    • xpl: unchanged
    • ypl: unchanged
    • sphi: unchanged
    • cphi: unchanged
    • diurab: unchanged
    • l: unchanged
    • refa: unchanged
    • refb: unchanged

Notes

  1. The TDB date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TDB)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience. For most applications of this function the choice will not be at all critical.

    TT can be used instead of TDB without any significant impact on accuracy.

  2. All the vectors are with respect to BCRS axes.

  3. This is one of several functions that inserts into the astrom structure star-independent parameters needed for the chain of astrometric transformations ICRS <-> GCRS <-> CIRS <-> observed.

    The various functions support different classes of observer and portions of the transformation chain:

    FunctionsObserverTransformation
    apcg apcg13geocentricICRS <-> GCRS
    apci apci13terrestrialICRS <-> CIRS
    apco apco13terrestrialICRS <-> observed
    apcs apcs13spaceICRS <-> GCRS
    aper aper13terrestrialupdate Earth rotation
    apio apio13terrestrialCIRS <-> observed

    Those with names ending in "13" use contemporary ERFA models to compute the various ephemerides. The others accept ephemerides supplied by the caller.

    The transformation from ICRS to GCRS covers space motion, parallax, light deflection, and aberration. From GCRS to CIRS comprises frame bias and precession-nutation. From CIRS to observed takes account of Earth rotation, polar motion, diurnal aberration and parallax (unless subsumed into the ICRS <-> GCRS transformation), and atmospheric refraction.

  4. The context structure astrom produced by this function is used by atciq* and aticq*.

Called

  • apcs: astrometry parameters, ICRS-GCRS, space observer
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ERFA.apcg13Method
apcg13(date1, date2)

For a geocentric observer, prepare star-independent astrometry parameters for transformations between ICRS and GCRS coordinates. The caller supplies the date, and ERFA models are used to predict the Earth ephemeris.

The parameters produced by this function are required in the parallax, light deflection and aberration parts of the astrometric transformation chain.

Given

  • date1: TDB as a 2-part...
  • date2: ...Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • astrom: Star-independent astrometry parameters:
    • pmt: PM time interval (SSB, Julian years)
    • eb: SSB to observer (vector, au)
    • eh: Sun to observer (unit vector)
    • em: Distance from Sun to observer (au)
    • v: Barycentric observer velocity (vector, c)
    • bm1: $\sqrt{1-|v|^2}$ Reciprocal of Lorenz factor
    • bpn: Bias-precession-nutation matrix
    • along: unchanged
    • xpl: unchanged
    • ypl: unchanged
    • sphi: unchanged
    • cphi: unchanged
    • diurab: unchanged
    • l: unchanged
    • refa: unchanged
    • refb: unchanged

Notes

  1. The TDB date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TDB)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience. For most applications of this function the choice will not be at all critical.

    TT can be used instead of TDB without any significant impact on accuracy.

  2. All the vectors are with respect to BCRS axes.

  3. In cases where the caller wishes to supply his own Earth ephemeris, the function apcg can be used instead of the present function.

  4. This is one of several functions that inserts into the astrom structure star-independent parameters needed for the chain of astrometric transformations ICRS <-> GCRS <-> CIRS <-> observed.

    The various functions support different classes of observer and portions of the transformation chain:

    FunctionsObserverTransformation
    apcg apcg13geocentricICRS <-> GCRS
    apci apci13terrestrialICRS <-> CIRS
    apco apco13terrestrialICRS <-> observed
    apcs apcs13spaceICRS <-> GCRS
    aper aper13terrestrialupdate Earth rotation
    apio apio13terrestrialCIRS <-> observed

    Those with names ending in "13" use contemporary ERFA models to compute the various ephemerides. The others accept ephemerides supplied by the caller.

    The transformation from ICRS to GCRS covers space motion, parallax, light deflection, and aberration. From GCRS to CIRS comprises frame bias and precession-nutation. From CIRS to observed takes account of Earth rotation, polar motion, diurnal aberration and parallax (unless subsumed into the ICRS <-> GCRS transformation), and atmospheric refraction.

  5. The context structure astrom produced by this function is used by atciq* and aticq*.

Called

  • epv00: Earth position and velocity
  • apcg: astrometry parameters, ICRS-GCRS, geocenter
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ERFA.apciMethod
apci(date1, date2, ebpv, ehp, x, y, s)

For a terrestrial observer, prepare star-independent astrometry parameters for transformations between ICRS and geocentric CIRS coordinates. The Earth ephemeris and CIP/CIO are supplied by the caller.

The parameters produced by this function are required in the parallax, light deflection, aberration, and bias-precession-nutation parts of the astrometric transformation chain.

Given

  • date1: TDB as a 2-part...
  • date2: ...Julian Date (Note 1)
  • ebpv: Earth barycentric position/velocity (au, au/day)
  • ehp: Earth heliocentric position (au)
  • x, y: CIP X,Y (components of unit vector)
  • s: The CIO locator s (radians)

Returned

  • astrom: Star-independent astrometry parameters:
    • pmt: PM time interval (SSB, Julian years)
    • eb: SSB to observer (vector, au)
    • eh: Sun to observer (unit vector)
    • em: Distance from Sun to observer (au)
    • v: Barycentric observer velocity (vector, c)
    • bm1: $\sqrt{1-|v|^2}$ Reciprocal of Lorenz factor
    • bpn: Bias-precession-nutation matrix
    • along: unchanged
    • xpl: unchanged
    • ypl: unchanged
    • sphi: unchanged
    • cphi: unchanged
    • diurab: unchanged
    • l: unchanged
    • refa: unchanged
    • refb: unchanged

Notes

  1. The TDB date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TDB)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience. For most applications of this function the choice will not be at all critical.

    TT can be used instead of TDB without any significant impact on accuracy.

  2. All the vectors are with respect to BCRS axes.

  3. In cases where the caller does not wish to provide the Earth ephemeris and CIP/CIO, the function apci13 can be used instead of the present function. This computes the required quantities using other ERFA functions.

  4. This is one of several functions that inserts into the astrom structure star-independent parameters needed for the chain of astrometric transformations ICRS <-> GCRS <-> CIRS <-> observed.

    The various functions support different classes of observer and portions of the transformation chain:

    FunctionsObserverTransformation
    apcg apcg13geocentricICRS <-> GCRS
    apci apci13terrestrialICRS <-> CIRS
    apco apco13terrestrialICRS <-> observed
    apcs apcs13spaceICRS <-> GCRS
    aper aper13terrestrialupdate Earth rotation
    apio apio13terrestrialCIRS <-> observed

    Those with names ending in "13" use contemporary ERFA models to compute the various ephemerides. The others accept ephemerides supplied by the caller.

    The transformation from ICRS to GCRS covers space motion, parallax, light deflection, and aberration. From GCRS to CIRS comprises frame bias and precession-nutation. From CIRS to observed takes account of Earth rotation, polar motion, diurnal aberration and parallax (unless subsumed into the ICRS <-> GCRS transformation), and atmospheric refraction.

  5. The context structure astrom produced by this function is used by atciq* and aticq*.

Called

  • apcg: astrometry parameters, ICRS-GCRS, geocenter
  • c2ixys: celestial-to-intermediate matrix, given X,Y and s
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ERFA.apci13Method
apci13(date1, date2)

For a terrestrial observer, prepare star-independent astrometry parameters for transformations between ICRS and geocentric CIRS coordinates. The caller supplies the date, and ERFA models are used to predict the Earth ephemeris and CIP/CIO.

The parameters produced by this function are required in the parallax, light deflection, aberration, and bias-precession-nutation parts of the astrometric transformation chain.

Given

  • date1: TDB as a 2-part...
  • date2: ...Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • astrom: Star-independent astrometry parameters:
    • pmt: PM time interval (SSB, Julian years)
    • eb: SSB to observer (vector, au)
    • eh: Sun to observer (unit vector)
    • em: Distance from Sun to observer (au)
    • v: Barycentric observer velocity (vector, c)
    • bm1: $\sqrt{1-|v|^2}$ Reciprocal of Lorenz factor
    • bpn: Bias-precession-nutation matrix
    • along: unchanged
    • xpl: unchanged
    • ypl: unchanged
    • sphi: unchanged
    • cphi: unchanged
    • diurab: unchanged
    • l: unchanged
    • refa: unchanged
    • refb: unchanged
  • eo: Equation of the origins (ERA-GST)

Notes

  1. The TDB date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TDB)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience. For most applications of this function the choice will not be at all critical.

    TT can be used instead of TDB without any significant impact on accuracy.

  2. All the vectors are with respect to BCRS axes.

  3. In cases where the caller wishes to supply his own Earth ephemeris and CIP/CIO, the function apci can be used instead of the present function.

  4. This is one of several functions that inserts into the astrom structure star-independent parameters needed for the chain of astrometric transformations ICRS <-> GCRS <-> CIRS <-> observed.

    The various functions support different classes of observer and portions of the transformation chain:

    FunctionsObserverTransformation
    apcg apcg13geocentricICRS <-> GCRS
    apci apci13terrestrialICRS <-> CIRS
    apco apco13terrestrialICRS <-> observed
    apcs apcs13spaceICRS <-> GCRS
    aper aper13terrestrialupdate Earth rotation
    apio apio13terrestrialCIRS <-> observed

    Those with names ending in "13" use contemporary ERFA models to compute the various ephemerides. The others accept ephemerides supplied by the caller.

    The transformation from ICRS to GCRS covers space motion, parallax, light deflection, and aberration. From GCRS to CIRS comprises frame bias and precession-nutation. From CIRS to observed takes account of Earth rotation, polar motion, diurnal aberration and parallax (unless subsumed into the ICRS <-> GCRS transformation), and atmospheric refraction.

  5. The context structure astrom produced by this function is used by atciq* and aticq*.

Called

  • epv00: Earth position and velocity
  • pnm06a: classical NPB matrix, IAU 2006/2000A
  • bpn2xy: extract CIP X,Y coordinates from NPB matrix
  • s06: the CIO locator s, given X,Y, IAU 2006
  • apci: astrometry parameters, ICRS-CIRS
  • eors: equation of the origins, given NPB matrix and s
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ERFA.apcoMethod
apco(date1, date2, ebpv, ehp, x, y, s, theta, elong, phi, hm, xp, yp, sp, refa, refb)

For a terrestrial observer, prepare star-independent astrometry parameters for transformations between ICRS and observed coordinates. The caller supplies the Earth ephemeris, the Earth rotation information and the refraction constants as well as the site coordinates.

Given

  • date1: TDB as a 2-part...
  • date2: ...Julian Date (Note 1)
  • ebpv: Earth barycentric PV (au, au/day, Note 2)
  • ehp: Earth heliocentric P (au, Note 2)
  • x, y: CIP X,Y (components of unit vector)
  • s: The CIO locator s (radians)
  • theta: Earth rotation angle (radians)
  • elong: Longitude (radians, east +ve, Note 3)
  • phi: Latitude (geodetic, radians, Note 3)
  • hm: Height above ellipsoid (m, geodetic, Note 3)
  • xp, yp: Polar motion coordinates (radians, Note 4)
  • sp: The TIO locator s' (radians, Note 4)
  • refa: Refraction constant A (radians, Note 5)
  • refb: Refraction constant B (radians, Note 5)

Returned

  • astrom: Star-independent astrometry parameters:
    • pmt: PM time interval (SSB, Julian years)
    • eb: SSB to observer (vector, au)
    • eh: Sun to observer (unit vector)
    • em: Distance from Sun to observer (au)
    • v: Barycentric observer velocity (vector, c)
    • bm1: $\sqrt{1-|v|^2}$ Reciprocal of Lorenz factor
    • bpn: Bias-precession-nutation matrix
    • along: Longitude + s' (radians)
    • xp1: Polar motion xp wrt local meridian (radians)
    • yp1: Polar motion yp wrt local meridian (radians)
    • sphi: Sine of geodetic latitude
    • cphi: Cosine of geodetic latitude
    • diurab: Magnitude of diurnal aberration vector
    • l: "Local" Earth rotation angle (radians)
    • refa: Refraction constant A (radians)
    • refb: Refraction constant B (radians)

Notes

  1. The TDB date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TDB)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience. For most applications of this function the choice will not be at all critical.

    TT can be used instead of TDB without any significant impact on accuracy.

  2. The vectors eb, eh, and all the astrom vectors, are with respect to BCRS axes.

  3. The geographical coordinates are with respect to the WGS84 reference ellipsoid. TAKE CARE WITH THE LONGITUDE SIGN CONVENTION: the longitude required by the present function is right-handed, i.e. east-positive, in accordance with geographical convention.

  4. xp and yp are the coordinates (in radians) of the Celestial Intermediate Pole with respect to the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions), measured along the meridians 0 and 90 deg west respectively. sp is the TIO locator s', in radians, which positions the Terrestrial Intermediate Origin on the equator. For many applications, xp, yp and (especially) sp can be set to zero.

    Internally, the polar motion is stored in a form rotated onto the local meridian.

  5. The refraction constants refa and refb are for use in a $dZ = A*\tan(Z)+B*\tan^3(Z)$ model, where Z is the observed (i.e. refracted) zenith distance and dZ is the amount of refraction.

  6. It is advisable to take great care with units, as even unlikely values of the input parameters are accepted and processed in accordance with the models used.

  7. In cases where the caller does not wish to provide the Earth Ephemeris, the Earth rotation information and refraction constants, the function apco13 can be used instead of the present function. This starts from UTC and weather readings etc. and computes suitable values using other ERFA functions.

  8. This is one of several functions that inserts into the astrom structure star-independent parameters needed for the chain of astrometric transformations ICRS <-> GCRS <-> CIRS <-> observed.

    The various functions support different classes of observer and portions of the transformation chain:

    FunctionsObserverTransformation
    apcg apcg13geocentricICRS <-> GCRS
    apci apci13terrestrialICRS <-> CIRS
    apco apco13terrestrialICRS <-> observed
    apcs apcs13spaceICRS <-> GCRS
    aper aper13terrestrialupdate Earth rotation
    apio apio13terrestrialCIRS <-> observed

    Those with names ending in "13" use contemporary ERFA models to compute the various ephemerides. The others accept ephemerides supplied by the caller.

    The transformation from ICRS to GCRS covers space motion, parallax, light deflection, and aberration. From GCRS to CIRS comprises frame bias and precession-nutation. From CIRS to observed takes account of Earth rotation, polar motion, diurnal aberration and parallax (unless subsumed into the ICRS <-> GCRS transformation), and atmospheric refraction.

  9. The context structure astrom produced by this function is used by atioq, atoiq, atciq and aticq.

Called

  • aper: astrometry parameters: update ERA
  • c2ixys: celestial-to-intermediate matrix, given X,Y and s
  • pvtob: position/velocity of terrestrial station
  • trxpv: product of transpose of r-matrix and pv-vector
  • apcs: astrometry parameters, ICRS-GCRS, space observer
  • cr: copy r-matrix
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ERFA.apco13Method
apco13(utc1, utc2, dut1, elong, phi, hm, xp, yp, phpa, tk, rh, wl)

For a terrestrial observer, prepare star-independent astrometry parameters for transformations between ICRS and observed coordinates. The caller supplies UTC, site coordinates, ambient air conditions and observing wavelength, and ERFA models are used to obtain the Earth ephemeris, CIP/CIO and refraction constants.

The parameters produced by this function are required in the parallax, light deflection, aberration, and bias-precession-nutation parts of the ICRS/CIRS transformations.

Given

  • utc1: UTC as a 2-part...
  • utc2: ...quasi Julian Date (Notes 1,2)
  • dut1: UT1-UTC (seconds, Note 3)
  • elong: Longitude (radians, east +ve, Note 4)
  • phi: Latitude (geodetic, radians, Note 4)
  • hm: Height above ellipsoid (m, geodetic, Notes 4,6)
  • xp, yp: Polar motion coordinates (radians, Note 5)
  • phpa: Pressure at the observer (hPa = mB, Note 6)
  • tc: Ambient temperature at the observer (deg C)
  • rh: Relative humidity at the observer (range 0-1)
  • wl: Wavelength (micrometers, Note 7)

Returned

  • astrom: Star-independent astrometry parameters:
    • pmt: PM time interval (SSB, Julian years)
    • eb: SSB to observer (vector, au)
    • eh: Sun to observer (unit vector)
    • em: Distance from Sun to observer (au)
    • v: Barycentric observer velocity (vector, c)
    • bm1: $\sqrt{1-|v|^2}$ Reciprocal of Lorenz factor
    • bpn: Bias-precession-nutation matrix
    • along: Longitude + s' (radians)
    • xp1: Polar motion xp wrt local meridian (radians)
    • yp1: Polar motion yp wrt local meridian (radians)
    • sphi: Sine of geodetic latitude
    • cphi: Cosine of geodetic latitude
    • diurab: Magnitude of diurnal aberration vector
    • l: "Local" Earth rotation angle (radians)
    • refa: Refraction constant A (radians)
    • refb: Refraction constant B (radians)
  • eo: Equation of the origins (ERA-GST)

Notes

  1. utc1+utc2 is quasi Julian Date (see Note 2), apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments, for example where utc1 is the Julian Day Number and utc2 is the fraction of a day.

    However, JD cannot unambiguously represent UTC during a leap second unless special measures are taken. The convention in the present function is that the JD day represents UTC days whether the length is 86399, 86400 or 86401 SI seconds.

    Applications should use the function dtf2d to convert from calendar date and time of day into 2-part quasi Julian Date, as it implements the leap-second-ambiguity convention just described.

  2. The warning status "dubious year" flags UTCs that predate the introduction of the time scale or that are too far in the future to be trusted. See dat for further details.

  3. UT1-UTC is tabulated in IERS bulletins. It increases by exactly one second at the end of each positive UTC leap second, introduced in order to keep UT1-UTC within +/- 0.9s. n.b. This practice is under review, and in the future UT1-UTC may grow essentially without limit.

  4. The geographical coordinates are with respect to the WGS84 reference ellipsoid. TAKE CARE WITH THE LONGITUDE SIGN: the longitude required by the present function is east-positive (i.e. right-handed), in accordance with geographical convention.

  5. The polar motion xp,yp can be obtained from IERS bulletins. The values are the coordinates (in radians) of the Celestial Intermediate Pole with respect to the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003), measured along the meridians 0 and 90 deg west respectively. For many applications, xp and yp can be set to zero.

    Internally, the polar motion is stored in a form rotated onto the local meridian.

  6. If hm, the height above the ellipsoid of the observing station in meters, is not known but phpa, the pressure in hPa (=mB), is available, an adequate estimate of hm can be obtained from the expression

    hm = -29.3 * tsl * log ( phpa / 1013.25 );

    where tsl is the approximate sea-level air temperature in K (See Astrophysical Quantities, C.W.Allen, 3rd edition, section 52). Similarly, if the pressure phpa is not known, it can be estimated from the height of the observing station, hm, as follows:

    phpa = 1013.25 * exp ( -hm / ( 29.3 * tsl ) );

    Note, however, that the refraction is nearly proportional to the pressure and that an accurate phpa value is important for precise work.

  7. The argument wl specifies the observing wavelength in micrometers. The transition from optical to radio is assumed to occur at 100 micrometers (about 3000 GHz).

  8. It is advisable to take great care with units, as even unlikely values of the input parameters are accepted and processed in accordance with the models used.

  9. In cases where the caller wishes to supply his own Earth ephemeris, Earth rotation information and refraction constants, the function apco can be used instead of the present function.

  10. This is one of several functions that inserts into the astrom structure star-independent parameters needed for the chain of astrometric transformations ICRS <-> GCRS <-> CIRS <-> observed.

    The various functions support different classes of observer and portions of the transformation chain:

    FunctionsObserverTransformation
    apcg apcg13geocentricICRS <-> GCRS
    apci apci13terrestrialICRS <-> CIRS
    apco apco13terrestrialICRS <-> observed
    apcs apcs13spaceICRS <-> GCRS
    aper aper13terrestrialupdate Earth rotation
    apio apio13terrestrialCIRS <-> observed

    Those with names ending in "13" use contemporary ERFA models to compute the various ephemerides. The others accept ephemerides supplied by the caller.

    The transformation from ICRS to GCRS covers space motion, parallax, light deflection, and aberration. From GCRS to CIRS comprises frame bias and precession-nutation. From CIRS to observed takes account of Earth rotation, polar motion, diurnal aberration and parallax (unless subsumed into the ICRS <-> GCRS transformation), and atmospheric refraction.

  11. The context structure astrom produced by this function is used by atioq, atoiq, atciq* and aticq*.

Called

  • utctai: UTC to TAI
  • taitt: TAI to TT
  • utcut1: UTC to UT1
  • epv00: Earth position and velocity
  • pnm06a: classical NPB matrix, IAU 2006/2000A
  • bpn2xy: extract CIP X,Y coordinates from NPB matrix
  • s06: the CIO locator s, given X,Y, IAU 2006
  • era00: Earth rotation angle, IAU 2000
  • sp00: the TIO locator s', IERS 2000
  • refco: refraction constants for given ambient conditions
  • apco: astrometry parameters, ICRS-observed
  • eors: equation of the origins, given NPB matrix and s
source
ERFA.apcsMethod
apcs(date1, date2, pv, ebpv, ehp)

For an observer whose geocentric position and velocity are known, prepare star-independent astrometry parameters for transformations between ICRS and GCRS. The Earth ephemeris is supplied by the caller.

The parameters produced by this function are required in the space motion, parallax, light deflection and aberration parts of the astrometric transformation chain.

Given

  • date1: TDB as a 2-part...
  • date2: ...Julian Date (Note 1)
  • pv: Observer's geocentric pos/vel (m, m/s)
  • ebpv: Earth barycentric PV (au, au/day)
  • ehp: Earth heliocentric P (au)

Returned

  • astrom: Star-independent astrometry parameters:
    • pmt: PM time interval (SSB, Julian years)
    • eb: SSB to observer (vector, au)
    • eh: Sun to observer (unit vector)
    • em: Distance from Sun to observer (au)
    • v: Barycentric observer velocity (vector, c)
    • bm1: $\sqrt{1-|v|^2}$ Reciprocal of Lorenz factor
    • bpn: Bias-precession-nutation matrix
    • along: unchanged
    • xpl: unchanged
    • ypl: unchanged
    • sphi: unchanged
    • cphi: unchanged
    • diurab: unchanged
    • l: unchanged
    • refa: unchanged
    • refb: unchanged

Notes

  1. The TDB date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TDB)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience. For most applications of this function the choice will not be at all critical.

    TT can be used instead of TDB without any significant impact on accuracy.

  2. All the vectors are with respect to BCRS axes.

  3. Providing separate arguments for (i) the observer's geocentric position and velocity and (ii) the Earth ephemeris is done for convenience in the geocentric, terrestrial and Earth orbit cases. For deep space applications it maybe more convenient to specify zero geocentric position and velocity and to supply the observer's position and velocity information directly instead of with respect to the Earth. However, note the different units: m and m/s for the geocentric vectors, au and au/day for the heliocentric and barycentric vectors.

  4. In cases where the caller does not wish to provide the Earth ephemeris, the function apcs13 can be used instead of the present function. This computes the Earth ephemeris using the ERFA function epv00.

  5. This is one of several functions that inserts into the astrom structure star-independent parameters needed for the chain of astrometric transformations ICRS <-> GCRS <-> CIRS <-> observed.

    The various functions support different classes of observer and portions of the transformation chain:

    FunctionsObserverTransformation
    apcg apcg13geocentricICRS <-> GCRS
    apci apci13terrestrialICRS <-> CIRS
    apco apco13terrestrialICRS <-> observed
    apcs apcs13spaceICRS <-> GCRS
    aper aper13terrestrialupdate Earth rotation
    apio apio13terrestrialCIRS <-> observed

    Those with names ending in "13" use contemporary ERFA models to compute the various ephemerides. The others accept ephemerides supplied by the caller.

    The transformation from ICRS to GCRS covers space motion, parallax, light deflection, and aberration. From GCRS to CIRS comprises frame bias and precession-nutation. From CIRS to observed takes account of Earth rotation, polar motion, diurnal aberration and parallax (unless subsumed into the ICRS <-> GCRS transformation), and atmospheric refraction.

  6. The context structure astrom produced by this function is used by atciq* and aticq*.

Called

  • erfa_cp: copy p-vector
  • pm: modulus of p-vector
  • pn: decompose p-vector into modulus and direction
  • ir: initialize r-matrix to identity
source
ERFA.apcs13Method
apcs13(date1, date2, pv)

For an observer whose geocentric position and velocity are known, prepare star-independent astrometry parameters for transformations between ICRS and GCRS. The Earth ephemeris is from ERFA models.

The parameters produced by this function are required in the space motion, parallax, light deflection and aberration parts of the astrometric transformation chain.

Given

  • date1: TDB as a 2-part...
  • date2: ...Julian Date (Note 1)
  • pv: Observer's geocentric pos/vel (Note 3)

Returned

  • EraASTROM* star-independent astrometry parameters:
    • pmt: PM time interval (SSB, Julian years)
    • eb: SSB to observer (vector, au)
    • eh: Sun to observer (unit vector)
    • em: Distance from Sun to observer (au)
    • v: Barycentric observer velocity (vector, c)
    • bm1: $\sqrt{1-|v|^2}$ Reciprocal of Lorenz factor
    • bpn: Bias-precession-nutation matrix
    • along: unchanged
    • xpl: unchanged
    • ypl: unchanged
    • sphi: unchanged
    • cphi: unchanged
    • diurab: unchanged
    • l: unchanged
    • refa: unchanged
    • refb: unchanged

Notes

  1. The TDB date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TDB)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience. For most applications of this function the choice will not be at all critical.

    TT can be used instead of TDB without any significant impact on accuracy.

  2. All the vectors are with respect to BCRS axes.

  3. The observer's position and velocity pv are geocentric but with respect to BCRS axes, and in units of m and m/s. No assumptions are made about proximity to the Earth, and the function can be used for deep space applications as well as Earth orbit and terrestrial.

  4. In cases where the caller wishes to supply his own Earth ephemeris, the function apcs can be used instead of the present function.

  5. This is one of several functions that inserts into the astrom structure star-independent parameters needed for the chain of astrometric transformations ICRS <-> GCRS <-> CIRS <-> observed.

    The various functions support different classes of observer and portions of the transformation chain:

    FunctionsObserverTransformation
    apcg apcg13geocentricICRS <-> GCRS
    apci apci13terrestrialICRS <-> CIRS
    apco apco13terrestrialICRS <-> observed
    apcs apcs13spaceICRS <-> GCRS
    aper aper13terrestrialupdate Earth rotation
    apio apio13terrestrialCIRS <-> observed

    Those with names ending in "13" use contemporary ERFA models to compute the various ephemerides. The others accept ephemerides supplied by the caller.

    The transformation from ICRS to GCRS covers space motion, parallax, light deflection, and aberration. From GCRS to CIRS comprises frame bias and precession-nutation. From CIRS to observed takes account of Earth rotation, polar motion, diurnal aberration and parallax (unless subsumed into the ICRS <-> GCRS transformation), and atmospheric refraction.

  6. The context structure astrom produced by this function is used by atciq* and aticq*.

Called

  • epv00: Earth position and velocity
  • apcs: astrometry parameters, ICRS-GCRS, space observer
source
ERFA.aperMethod
aper(theta, astrom)

In the star-independent astrometry parameters, update only the Earth rotation angle, supplied by the caller explicitly.

Given

  • theta: Earth rotation angle (radians, Note 2)
  • astrom: Star-independent astrometry parameters:
    • pmt: unchanged
    • eb: unchanged
    • eh: unchanged
    • em: unchanged
    • v: unchanged
    • bm1: unchanged
    • bpn: unchanged
    • along: Longitude + s' (radians)
    • xpl: unchanged
    • ypl: unchanged
    • sphi: unchanged
    • cphi: unchanged
    • diurab: unchanged
    • l: unchanged
    • refa: unchanged
    • refb: unchanged

Returned

  • astrom: Star-independent astrometry parameters:
    • pmt: unchanged
    • eb: unchanged
    • eh: unchanged
    • em: unchanged
    • v: unchanged
    • bm1: unchanged
    • bpn: unchanged
    • along: unchanged
    • xpl: unchanged
    • ypl: unchanged
    • sphi: unchanged
    • cphi: unchanged
    • diurab: unchanged
    • l: "Local" Earth rotation angle (radians)
    • refa: unchanged
    • refb: unchanged

Notes

  1. This function exists to enable sidereal-tracking applications to avoid wasteful recomputation of the bulk of the astrometry parameters: only the Earth rotation is updated.

  2. For targets expressed as equinox based positions, such as classical geocentric apparent (RA,Dec), the supplied theta can be Greenwich apparent sidereal time rather than Earth rotation angle.

  3. The function aper13 can be used instead of the present function, and starts from UT1 rather than ERA itself.

  4. This is one of several functions that inserts into the astrom structure star-independent parameters needed for the chain of astrometric transformations ICRS <-> GCRS <-> CIRS <-> observed.

    The various functions support different classes of observer and portions of the transformation chain:

    FunctionsObserverTransformation
    apcg apcg13geocentricICRS <-> GCRS
    apci apci13terrestrialICRS <-> CIRS
    apco apco13terrestrialICRS <-> observed
    apcs apcs13spaceICRS <-> GCRS
    aper aper13terrestrialupdate Earth rotation
    apio apio13terrestrialCIRS <-> observed

    Those with names ending in "13" use contemporary ERFA models to compute the various ephemerides. The others accept ephemerides supplied by the caller.

    The transformation from ICRS to GCRS covers space motion, parallax, light deflection, and aberration. From GCRS to CIRS comprises frame bias and precession-nutation. From CIRS to observed takes account of Earth rotation, polar motion, diurnal aberration and parallax (unless subsumed into the ICRS <-> GCRS transformation), and atmospheric refraction.

source
ERFA.aper13Method
aper13(ut11, ut12, astrom)

In the star-independent astrometry parameters, update only the Earth rotation angle. The caller provides UT1, (n.b. not UTC).

Given

  • ut11: UT1 as a 2-part...
  • ut12: ...Julian Date (Note 1)
  • astrom: Star-independent astrometry parameters:
    • pmt: unchanged
    • eb: unchanged
    • eh: unchanged
    • em: unchanged
    • v: unchanged
    • bm1: unchanged
    • bpn: unchanged
    • along: Longitude + s' (radians)
    • xpl: unchanged
    • ypl: unchanged
    • sphi: unchanged
    • cphi: unchanged
    • diurab: unchanged
    • l: unchanged
    • refa: unchanged
    • refb: unchanged

Returned

  • astrom: Star-independent astrometry parameters:
    • pmt: unchanged
    • eb: unchanged
    • eh: unchanged
    • em: unchanged
    • v: unchanged
    • bm1: unchanged
    • bpn: unchanged
    • along: unchanged
    • xpl: unchanged
    • ypl: unchanged
    • sphi: unchanged
    • cphi: unchanged
    • diurab: unchanged
    • l: "Local" Earth rotation angle (radians)
    • refa: unchanged
    • refb: unchanged

Notes

  1. The UT1 date (n.b. not UTC) ut11+ut12 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the arguments ut11 and ut12. For example, JD(UT1)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    ut11ut12Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 and MJD methods are good compromises between resolution and convenience. The date & time method is best matched to the algorithm used: maximum precision is delivered when the ut11 argument is for 0hrs UT1 on the day in question and the ut12 argument lies in the range 0 to 1, or vice versa.

  2. If the caller wishes to provide the Earth rotation angle itself, the function aper can be used instead. One use of this technique is to substitute Greenwich apparent sidereal time and thereby to support equinox based transformations directly.

  3. This is one of several functions that inserts into the astrom structure star-independent parameters needed for the chain of astrometric transformations ICRS <-> GCRS <-> CIRS <-> observed.

    The various functions support different classes of observer and portions of the transformation chain:

    FunctionsObserverTransformation
    apcg apcg13geocentricICRS <-> GCRS
    apci apci13terrestrialICRS <-> CIRS
    apco apco13terrestrialICRS <-> observed
    apcs apcs13spaceICRS <-> GCRS
    aper aper13terrestrialupdate Earth rotation
    apio apio13terrestrialCIRS <-> observed

    Those with names ending in "13" use contemporary ERFA models to compute the various ephemerides. The others accept ephemerides supplied by the caller.

    The transformation from ICRS to GCRS covers space motion, parallax, light deflection, and aberration. From GCRS to CIRS comprises frame bias and precession-nutation. From CIRS to observed takes account of Earth rotation, polar motion, diurnal aberration and parallax (unless subsumed into the ICRS <-> GCRS transformation), and atmospheric refraction.

Called

  • aper: astrometry parameters: update ERA
  • era00: Earth rotation angle, IAU 2000
source
ERFA.apioMethod
apio(sp, theta, elong, phi, hm, xp, yp, refa, refb)

For a terrestrial observer, prepare star-independent astrometry parameters for transformations between CIRS and observed coordinates. The caller supplies the Earth orientation information and the refraction constants as well as the site coordinates.

Given

  • sp: The TIO locator s' (radians, Note 1)
  • theta: Earth rotation angle (radians)
  • elong: Longitude (radians, east +ve, Note 2)
  • phi: Geodetic latitude (radians, Note 2)
  • hm: Height above ellipsoid (m, geodetic Note 2)
  • xp, yp: Polar motion coordinates (radians, Note 3)
  • refa: Refraction constant A (radians, Note 4)
  • refb: Refraction constant B (radians, Note 4)

Returned

  • astrom: Star-independent astrometry parameters:
    • pmt: unchanged
    • eb: unchanged
    • eh: unchanged
    • em: unchanged
    • v: unchanged
    • bm1: unchanged
    • bpn: unchanged
    • along: Longitude + s' (radians)
    • xp1: Polar motion xp wrt local meridian (radians)
    • yp1: Polar motion yp wrt local meridian (radians)
    • sphi: Sine of geodetic latitude
    • cphi: Cosine of geodetic latitude
    • diurab: Magnitude of diurnal aberration vector
    • l: "Local" Earth rotation angle (radians)
    • refa: Refraction constant A (radians)
    • refb: Refraction constant B (radians)

Notes

  1. sp, the TIO locator s', is a tiny quantity needed only by the most precise applications. It can either be set to zero or predicted using the ERFA function sp00.

  2. The geographical coordinates are with respect to the WGS84 reference ellipsoid. TAKE CARE WITH THE LONGITUDE SIGN: the longitude required by the present function is east-positive (i.e. right-handed), in accordance with geographical convention.

  3. The polar motion xp,yp can be obtained from IERS bulletins. The values are the coordinates (in radians) of the Celestial Intermediate Pole with respect to the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003), measured along the meridians 0 and 90 deg west respectively. For many applications, xp and yp can be set to zero.

    Internally, the polar motion is stored in a form rotated onto the local meridian.

  4. The refraction constants refa and refb are for use in a $dZ = A*\tan(Z)+B*\tan^3(Z)$ model, where Z is the observed (i.e. refracted) zenith distance and dZ is the amount of refraction.

  5. It is advisable to take great care with units, as even unlikely values of the input parameters are accepted and processed in accordance with the models used.

  6. In cases where the caller does not wish to provide the Earth rotation information and refraction constants, the function apio13 can be used instead of the present function. This starts from UTC and weather readings etc. and computes suitable values using other ERFA functions.

  7. This is one of several functions that inserts into the astrom structure star-independent parameters needed for the chain of astrometric transformations ICRS <-> GCRS <-> CIRS <-> observed.

    The various functions support different classes of observer and portions of the transformation chain:

    FunctionsObserverTransformation
    apcg apcg13geocentricICRS <-> GCRS
    apci apci13terrestrialICRS <-> CIRS
    apco apco13terrestrialICRS <-> observed
    apcs apcs13spaceICRS <-> GCRS
    aper aper13terrestrialupdate Earth rotation
    apio apio13terrestrialCIRS <-> observed

    Those with names ending in "13" use contemporary ERFA models to compute the various ephemerides. The others accept ephemerides supplied by the caller.

    The transformation from ICRS to GCRS covers space motion, parallax, light deflection, and aberration. From GCRS to CIRS comprises frame bias and precession-nutation. From CIRS to observed takes account of Earth rotation, polar motion, diurnal aberration and parallax (unless subsumed into the ICRS <-> GCRS transformation), and atmospheric refraction.

  8. The context structure astrom produced by this function is used by atioq and atoiq.

Called

  • pvtob: position/velocity of terrestrial station
  • aper: astrometry parameters: update ERA
source
ERFA.apio13Method
apio13(utc1, utc2, dut1, elong, phi, hm, xp, yp, phpa, tk, rh, wl)

For a terrestrial observer, prepare star-independent astrometry parameters for transformations between CIRS and observed coordinates. The caller supplies UTC, site coordinates, ambient air conditions and observing wavelength.

Given

  • utc1: UTC as a 2-part...
  • utc2: ...quasi Julian Date (Notes 1,2)
  • dut1: UT1-UTC (seconds)
  • elong: Longitude (radians, east +ve, Note 3)
  • phi: Geodetic latitude (radians, Note 3)
  • hm: Height above ellipsoid (m, geodetic Notes 4,6)
  • xp, yp: Polar motion coordinates (radians, Note 5)
  • phpa: Pressure at the observer (hPa = mB, Note 6)
  • tc: Ambient temperature at the observer (deg C)
  • rh: Relative humidity at the observer (range 0-1)
  • wl: Wavelength (micrometers, Note 7)

Returned

  • astrom: Star-independent astrometry parameters:
    • pmt: unchanged
    • eb: unchanged
    • eh: unchanged
    • em: unchanged
    • v: unchanged
    • bm1: unchanged
    • bpn: unchanged
    • along: Longitude + s' (radians)
    • xp1: Polar motion xp wrt local meridian (radians)
    • yp1: Polar motion yp wrt local meridian (radians)
    • sphi: Sine of geodetic latitude
    • cphi: Cosine of geodetic latitude
    • diurab: Magnitude of diurnal aberration vector
    • l: "Local" Earth rotation angle (radians)
    • refa: Refraction constant A (radians)
    • refb: Refraction constant B (radians)

Notes

  1. utc1+utc2 is quasi Julian Date (see Note 2), apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments, for example where utc1 is the Julian Day Number and utc2 is the fraction of a day.

    However, JD cannot unambiguously represent UTC during a leap second unless special measures are taken. The convention in the present function is that the JD day represents UTC days whether the length is 86399, 86400 or 86401 SI seconds.

    Applications should use the function dtf2d to convert from calendar date and time of day into 2-part quasi Julian Date, as it implements the leap-second-ambiguity convention just described.

  2. The warning status "dubious year" flags UTCs that predate the introduction of the time scale or that are too far in the future to be trusted. See dat for further details.

  3. UT1-UTC is tabulated in IERS bulletins. It increases by exactly one second at the end of each positive UTC leap second, introduced in order to keep UT1-UTC within +/- 0.9s. n.b. This practice is under review, and in the future UT1-UTC may grow essentially without limit.

  4. The geographical coordinates are with respect to the WGS84 reference ellipsoid. TAKE CARE WITH THE LONGITUDE SIGN: the longitude required by the present function is east-positive (i.e. right-handed), in accordance with geographical convention.

  5. The polar motion xp,yp can be obtained from IERS bulletins. The values are the coordinates (in radians) of the Celestial Intermediate Pole with respect to the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003), measured along the meridians 0 and 90 deg west respectively. For many applications, xp and yp can be set to zero.

    Internally, the polar motion is stored in a form rotated onto the local meridian.

  6. If hm, the height above the ellipsoid of the observing station in meters, is not known but phpa, the pressure in hPa (=mB), is available, an adequate estimate of hm can be obtained from the expression

    hm = -29.3 * tsl * log ( phpa / 1013.25 );

    where tsl is the approximate sea-level air temperature in K (See Astrophysical Quantities, C.W.Allen, 3rd edition, section 52). Similarly, if the pressure phpa is not known, it can be estimated from the height of the observing station, hm, as follows:

    phpa = 1013.25 * exp ( -hm / ( 29.3 * tsl ) );

    Note, however, that the refraction is nearly proportional to the pressure and that an accurate phpa value is important for precise work.

  7. The argument wl specifies the observing wavelength in micrometers. The transition from optical to radio is assumed to occur at 100 micrometers (about 3000 GHz).

  8. It is advisable to take great care with units, as even unlikely values of the input parameters are accepted and processed in accordance with the models used.

  9. In cases where the caller wishes to supply his own Earth rotation information and refraction constants, the function apc* can be used instead of the present function.

  10. This is one of several functions that inserts into the astrom structure star-independent parameters needed for the chain of astrometric transformations ICRS <-> GCRS <-> CIRS <-> observed.

    The various functions support different classes of observer and portions of the transformation chain:

    FunctionsObserverTransformation
    apcg apcg13geocentricICRS <-> GCRS
    apci apci13terrestrialICRS <-> CIRS
    apco apco13terrestrialICRS <-> observed
    apcs apcs13spaceICRS <-> GCRS
    aper aper13terrestrialupdate Earth rotation
    apio apio13terrestrialCIRS <-> observed

    Those with names ending in "13" use contemporary ERFA models to compute the various ephemerides. The others accept ephemerides supplied by the caller.

    The transformation from ICRS to GCRS covers space motion, parallax, light deflection, and aberration. From GCRS to CIRS comprises frame bias and precession-nutation. From CIRS to observed takes account of Earth rotation, polar motion, diurnal aberration and parallax (unless subsumed into the ICRS <-> GCRS transformation), and atmospheric refraction.

  11. The context structure astrom produced by this function is used by atioq and atoiq.

Called

  • utctai: UTC to TAI
  • taitt: TAI to TT
  • utcut1: UTC to UT1
  • sp00: the TIO locator s', IERS 2000
  • era00: Earth rotation angle, IAU 2000
  • refco: refraction constants for given ambient conditions
  • apio: astrometry parameters, CIRS-observed
source
ERFA.atcc13Method
atcc13(rc, dc, pr, pd, px, rv, date1, date2)

Transform a star's ICRS catalog entry (epoch J2000.0) into ICRS astrometric place.

Given

  • rc: ICRS right ascension at J2000.0 (radians, Note 1)
  • dc: ICRS declination at J2000.0 (radians, Note 1)
  • pr: RA proper motion (radians/year, Note 2)
  • pd: Dec proper motion (radians/year)
  • px: parallax (arcsec)
  • rv: radial velocity (km/s, +ve if receding)
  • date1: TDB as a 2-part...
  • date2: ...Julian Date (Note 3)

Returned

  • ra, da: ICRS astrometric RA,Dec (radians)

Notes

  1. Star data for an epoch other than J2000.0 (for example from the Hipparcos catalog, which has an epoch of J1991.25) will require a preliminary call to eraPmsafe before use.

  2. The proper motion in RA is dRA/dt rather than cos(Dec)*dRA/dt.

  3. The TDB date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TDB)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience. For most applications of this function the choice will not be at all critical.

    TT can be used instead of TDB without any significant impact on accuracy.

Called

  • apci13: astrometry parameters, ICRS-CIRS, 2013
  • atccq: quick catalog ICRS to astrometric
source
ERFA.atccqMethod
atccq(rc, dc, pr, pd, px, rv, astrom)

Quick transformation of a star's ICRS catalog entry (epoch J2000.0) into ICRS astrometric place, given precomputed star-independent astrometry parameters.

Use of this function is appropriate when efficiency is important and where many star positions are to be transformed for one date. The star-independent parameters can be obtained by calling one of the functions apci, apci13, apcg, apcg13, apco, apco13, apcs, apcs13.

If the parallax and proper motions are zero the transformation has no effect.

Given

  • rc, dc: ICRS RA,Dec at J2000.0 (radians)
  • pr: RA proper motion (radians/year, Note 3)
  • pd: Dec proper motion (radians/year)
  • px: parallax (arcsec)
  • rv: radial velocity (km/s, +ve if receding)
  • astrom: Star-independent astrometry parameters:
    • pmt: unchanged
    • eb: unchanged
    • eh: unchanged
    • em: unchanged
    • v: unchanged
    • bm1: unchanged
    • bpn: unchanged
    • along: Longitude + s' (radians)
    • xp1: Polar motion xp wrt local meridian (radians)
    • yp1: Polar motion yp wrt local meridian (radians)
    • sphi: Sine of geodetic latitude
    • cphi: Cosine of geodetic latitude
    • diurab: Magnitude of diurnal aberration vector
    • l: "Local" Earth rotation angle (radians)
    • refa: Refraction constant A (radians)
    • refb: Refraction constant B (radians)

Returned

  • ra, da: ICRS astrometric RA,Dec (radians)

Notes

  1. All the vectors are with respect to BCRS axes.

  2. Star data for an epoch other than J2000.0 (for example from the Hipparcos catalog, which has an epoch of J1991.25) will require a preliminary call to eraPmsafe before use.

  3. The proper motion in RA is dRA/dt rather than cos(Dec)*dRA/dt.

Called

  • pmpx: proper motion and parallax
  • c2s: p-vector to spherical
  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi
source
ERFA.atci13Method
atci13(rc, dc, pr, pd, px, rv, date1, date2)

Transform ICRS star data, epoch J2000.0, to CIRS.

Given

  • rc: ICRS right ascension at J2000.0 (radians, Note 1)
  • dc: ICRS declination at J2000.0 (radians, Note 1)
  • pr: RA proper motion (radians/year; Note 2)
  • pd: Dec proper motion (radians/year)
  • px: Parallax (arcsec)
  • rv: Radial velocity (km/s, +ve if receding)
  • date1: TDB as a 2-part...
  • date2: ...Julian Date (Note 3)

Returned

  • ri, di: CIRS geocentric RA,Dec (radians)
  • eo: Equation of the origins (ERA-GST, Note 5)

Notes

  1. Star data for an epoch other than J2000.0 (for example from the Hipparcos catalog, which has an epoch of J1991.25) will require a preliminary call to pmsafe before use.

  2. The proper motion in RA is dRA/dt rather than cos(Dec)*dRA/dt.

  3. The TDB date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TDB)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience. For most applications of this function the choice will not be at all critical.

    TT can be used instead of TDB without any significant impact on accuracy.

  4. The available accuracy is better than 1 milliarcsecond, limited mainly by the precession-nutation model that is used, namely IAU 2000A/2006. Very close to solar system bodies, additional errors of up to several milliarcseconds can occur because of unmodeled light deflection; however, the Sun's contribution is taken into account, to first order. The accuracy limitations of the ERFA function epv00 (used to compute Earth position and velocity) can contribute aberration errors of up to 5 microarcseconds. Light deflection at the Sun's limb is uncertain at the 0.4 mas level.

  5. Should the transformation to (equinox based) apparent place be required rather than (CIO based) intermediate place, subtract the equation of the origins from the returned right ascension: RA = RI - EO. (The anp function can then be applied, as required, to keep the result in the conventional 0-2pi range.)

Called

  • apci13: astrometry parameters, ICRS-CIRS, 2013
  • atciq: quick ICRS to CIRS
source
ERFA.atciqMethod
atciq(rc, dc, pr, pd, px, rv, astrom)

Quick ICRS, epoch J2000.0, to CIRS transformation, given precomputed star-independent astrometry parameters.

Use of this function is appropriate when efficiency is important and where many star positions are to be transformed for one date. The star-independent parameters can be obtained by calling one of the functions apci[13], apcg[13], apco[13] or apcs[13].

If the parallax and proper motions are zero the atciqz function can be used instead.

Given

  • rc, dc: ICRS RA,Dec at J2000.0 (radians)
  • pr: RA proper motion (radians/year; Note 3)
  • pd: Dec proper motion (radians/year)
  • px: Parallax (arcsec)
  • rv: Radial velocity (km/s, +ve if receding)
  • astrom: Star-independent astrometry parameters:
    • pmt: PM time interval (SSB, Julian years)
    • eb: SSB to observer (vector, au)
    • eh: Sun to observer (unit vector)
    • em: Distance from Sun to observer (au)
    • v: Barycentric observer velocity (vector, c)
    • bm1: $\sqrt{1-|v|^2}$ Reciprocal of Lorenz factor
    • bpn: Bias-precession-nutation matrix
    • along: Longitude + s' (radians)
    • xp1: Polar motion xp wrt local meridian (radians)
    • yp1: Polar motion yp wrt local meridian (radians)
    • sphi: Sine of geodetic latitude
    • cphi: Cosine of geodetic latitude
    • diurab: Magnitude of diurnal aberration vector
    • l: "Local" Earth rotation angle (radians)
    • refa: Refraction constant A (radians)
    • refb: Refraction constant B (radians)

Returned

  • ri, di: CIRS RA,Dec (radians)

Notes

  1. All the vectors are with respect to BCRS axes.

  2. Star data for an epoch other than J2000.0 (for example from the Hipparcos catalog, which has an epoch of J1991.25) will require a preliminary call to pmsafe before use.

  3. The proper motion in RA is dRA/dt rather than cos(Dec)*dRA/dt.

Called

  • pmpx: proper motion and parallax
  • ldsun: light deflection by the Sun
  • ab: stellar aberration
  • rxp: product of r-matrix and pv-vector
  • c2s: p-vector to spherical
  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi
source
ERFA.atciqnMethod
atciqn(rc, dc, pr, pd, px, rv, astrom, b::Vector{LDBODY})

Quick ICRS, epoch J2000.0, to CIRS transformation, given precomputed star-independent astrometry parameters plus a list of light- deflecting bodies.

Use of this function is appropriate when efficiency is important and where many star positions are to be transformed for one date. The star-independent parameters can be obtained by calling one of the functions apci[13], apcg[13], apco[13] or apcs[13].

If the only light-deflecting body to be taken into account is the Sun, the atciq function can be used instead. If in addition the parallax and proper motions are zero, the atciqz function can be used.

Given

  • rc, dc: ICRS RA,Dec at J2000.0 (radians)
  • pr: RA proper motion (radians/year; Note 3)
  • pd: Dec proper motion (radians/year)
  • px: Parallax (arcsec)
  • rv: Radial velocity (km/s, +ve if receding)
  • EraASTROM* star-independent astrometry parameters:
    • pmt: PM time interval (SSB, Julian years)
    • eb: SSB to observer (vector, au)
    • eh: Sun to observer (unit vector)
    • em: Distance from Sun to observer (au)
    • v: Barycentric observer velocity (vector, c)
    • bm1: $\sqrt{1-|v|^2}$ Reciprocal of Lorenz factor
    • bpn: Bias-precession-nutation matrix
    • along: Longitude + s' (radians)
    • xp1: Polar motion xp wrt local meridian (radians)
    • yp1: Polar motion yp wrt local meridian (radians)
    • sphi: Sine of geodetic latitude
    • cphi: Cosine of geodetic latitude
    • diurab: Magnitude of diurnal aberration vector
    • l: "Local" Earth rotation angle (radians)
    • refa: Refraction constant A (radians)
    • refb: Refraction constant B (radians)
  • n: Number of bodies (Note 3)
  • b::Vector{LDBODY}: Data for each of the n bodies (Notes 3,4):
    • bm: Mass of the body (solar masses, Note 5)
    • dl: Deflection limiter (Note 6)
    • pv: Barycentric PV of the body (au, au/day)

Returned

  • ri, di: CIRS RA,Dec (radians)

Notes

  1. Star data for an epoch other than J2000.0 (for example from the Hipparcos catalog, which has an epoch of J1991.25) will require a preliminary call to pmsafe before use.

  2. The proper motion in RA is dRA/dt rather than cos(Dec)*dRA/dt.

  3. The struct b contains n entries, one for each body to be considered. If n = 0, no gravitational light deflection will be applied, not even for the Sun.

  4. The struct b should include an entry for the Sun as well as for any planet or other body to be taken into account. The entries should be in the order in which the light passes the body.

  5. In the entry in the b struct for body i, the mass parameter b[i].bm can, as required, be adjusted in order to allow for such effects as quadrupole field.

  6. The deflection limiter parameter b[i].dl is phi^2/2, where phi is the angular separation (in radians) between star and body at which limiting is applied. As phi shrinks below the chosen threshold, the deflection is artificially reduced, reaching zero for phi = 0. Example values suitable for a terrestrial observer, together with masses, are as follows:

    body ib[i].bmb[i].dl
    Sun1.06e-6
    Jupiter0.000954353e-9
    Saturn0.000285743e-10
  7. For efficiency, validation of the contents of the b array is omitted. The supplied masses must be greater than zero, the position and velocity vectors must be right, and the deflection limiter greater than zero.

Called

  • pmpx: proper motion and parallax
  • ldn: light deflection by n bodies
  • ab: stellar aberration
  • rxp: product of r-matrix and pv-vector
  • c2s: p-vector to spherical
  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi
source
ERFA.atciqzMethod
atciqz(rc, dc, astrom)

Quick ICRS to CIRS transformation, given precomputed star- independent astrometry parameters, and assuming zero parallax and proper motion.

Use of this function is appropriate when efficiency is important and where many star positions are to be transformed for one date. The star-independent parameters can be obtained by calling one of the functions apci[13], apcg[13], apco[13] or apcs[13].

The corresponding function for the case of non-zero parallax and proper motion is atciq.

Given

  • rc, dc: ICRS astrometric RA,Dec (radians)
  • astrom: Star-independent astrometry parameters:
    • pmt: PM time interval (SSB, Julian years)
    • eb: SSB to observer (vector, au)
    • eh: Sun to observer (unit vector)
    • em: Distance from Sun to observer (au)
    • v: Barycentric observer velocity (vector, c)
    • bm1: $\sqrt{1-|v|^2}$ Reciprocal of Lorenz factor
    • bpn: Bias-precession-nutation matrix
    • along: Longitude + s' (radians)
    • xp1: Polar motion xp wrt local meridian (radians)
    • yp1: Polar motion yp wrt local meridian (radians)
    • sphi: Sine of geodetic latitude
    • cphi: Cosine of geodetic latitude
    • diurab: Magnitude of diurnal aberration vector
    • l: "Local" Earth rotation angle (radians)
    • refa: Refraction constant A (radians)
    • refb: Refraction constant B (radians)

Returned

  • ri, di: CIRS RA,Dec (radians)

Note

All the vectors are with respect to BCRS axes.

References

  • Urban, S. & Seidelmann, P. K. (eds), Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, 3rd ed., University Science Books (2013).

  • Klioner, Sergei A., "A practical relativistic model for micro- arcsecond astrometry in space", Astr. J. 125, 1580-1597 (2003).

Called

  • s2c: spherical coordinates to unit vector
  • ldsun: light deflection due to Sun
  • ab: stellar aberration
  • rxp: product of r-matrix and p-vector
  • c2s: p-vector to spherical
  • anp: normalize angle into range +/- pi
source
ERFA.atco13Method
atco13(rc, dc, pr, pd, px, rv, utc1, utc2, dut1, elong, phi, hm, xp, yp, phpa, tk, rh, wl)

ICRS RA,Dec to observed place. The caller supplies UTC, site coordinates, ambient air conditions and observing wavelength.

ERFA models are used for the Earth ephemeris, bias-precession- nutation, Earth orientation and refraction.

Given

  • rc, dc: ICRS right ascension at J2000.0 (radians, Note 1)
  • pr: RA proper motion (radians/year; Note 2)
  • pd: Dec proper motion (radians/year)
  • px: Parallax (arcsec)
  • rv: Radial velocity (km/s, +ve if receding)
  • utc1: UTC as a 2-part...
  • utc2: ...quasi Julian Date (Notes 3-4)
  • dut1: UT1-UTC (seconds, Note 5)
  • elong: Longitude (radians, east +ve, Note 6)
  • phi: Latitude (geodetic, radians, Note 6)
  • hm: Height above ellipsoid (m, geodetic, Notes 6,8)
  • xp, yp: Polar motion coordinates (radians, Note 7)
  • phpa: Pressure at the observer (hPa = mB, Note 8)
  • tc: Ambient temperature at the observer (deg C)
  • rh: Relative humidity at the observer (range 0-1)
  • wl: Wavelength (micrometers, Note 9)

Returned

  • aob: Observed azimuth (radians: N=0,E=90)
  • zob: Observed zenith distance (radians)
  • hob: Observed hour angle (radians)
  • dob: Observed declination (radians)
  • rob: Observed right ascension (CIO-based, radians)
  • eo: Equation of the origins (ERA-GST)

Notes

  1. Star data for an epoch other than J2000.0 (for example from the Hipparcos catalog, which has an epoch of J1991.25) will require a preliminary call to pmsafe before use.

  2. The proper motion in RA is dRA/dt rather than cos(Dec)*dRA/dt.

  3. utc1+utc2 is quasi Julian Date (see Note 2), apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments, for example where utc1 is the Julian Day Number and utc2 is the fraction of a day.

    However, JD cannot unambiguously represent UTC during a leap second unless special measures are taken. The convention in the present function is that the JD day represents UTC days whether the length is 86399, 86400 or 86401 SI seconds.

    Applications should use the function dtf2d to convert from calendar date and time of day into 2-part quasi Julian Date, as it implements the leap-second-ambiguity convention just described.

  4. The warning status "dubious year" flags UTCs that predate the introduction of the time scale or that are too far in the future to be trusted. See dat for further details.

  5. UT1-UTC is tabulated in IERS bulletins. It increases by exactly one second at the end of each positive UTC leap second, introduced in order to keep UT1-UTC within +/- 0.9s. n.b. This practice is under review, and in the future UT1-UTC may grow essentially without limit.

  6. The geographical coordinates are with respect to the WGS84 reference ellipsoid. TAKE CARE WITH THE LONGITUDE SIGN: the longitude required by the present function is east-positive (i.e. right-handed), in accordance with geographical convention.

  7. The polar motion xp,yp can be obtained from IERS bulletins. The values are the coordinates (in radians) of the Celestial Intermediate Pole with respect to the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003), measured along the meridians 0 and 90 deg west respectively. For many applications, xp and yp can be set to zero.

  8. If hm, the height above the ellipsoid of the observing station in meters, is not known but phpa, the pressure in hPa (=mB), is available, an adequate estimate of hm can be obtained from the expression

    hm = -29.3 * tsl * log ( phpa / 1013.25 );

    where tsl is the approximate sea-level air temperature in K (See Astrophysical Quantities, C.W.Allen, 3rd edition, section 52). Similarly, if the pressure phpa is not known, it can be estimated from the height of the observing station, hm, as follows:

    phpa = 1013.25 * exp ( -hm / ( 29.3 * tsl ) );

    Note, however, that the refraction is nearly proportional to the pressure and that an accurate phpa value is important for precise work.

  9. The argument wl specifies the observing wavelength in micrometers. The transition from optical to radio is assumed to occur at 100 micrometers (about 3000 GHz).

  10. The accuracy of the result is limited by the corrections for refraction, which use a simple $A*tan(z) + B*tan^3(z)$ model. Providing the meteorological parameters are known accurately and there are no gross local effects, the predicted observed coordinates should be within 0.05 arcsec (optical) or 1 arcsec (radio) for a zenith distance of less than 70 degrees, better than 30 arcsec (optical or radio) at 85 degrees and better than 20 arcmin (optical) or 30 arcmin (radio) at the horizon.

    Without refraction, the complementary functions atco13 and atoc13 are self-consistent to better than 1 microarcsecond all over the celestial sphere. With refraction included, consistency falls off at high zenith distances, but is still better than 0.05 arcsec at 85 degrees.

  11. "Observed" Az,ZD means the position that would be seen by a perfect geodetically aligned theodolite. (Zenith distance is used rather than altitude in order to reflect the fact that no allowance is made for depression of the horizon.) This is related to the observed HA,Dec via the standard rotation, using the geodetic latitude (corrected for polar motion), while the observed HA and RA are related simply through the Earth rotation angle and the site longitude. "Observed" RA,Dec or HA,Dec thus means the position that would be seen by a perfect equatorial with its polar axis aligned to the Earth's axis of rotation.

  12. It is advisable to take great care with units, as even unlikely values of the input parameters are accepted and processed in accordance with the models used.

Called

  • apco13: astrometry parameters, ICRS-observed, 2013
  • atciq: quick ICRS to CIRS
  • atioq: quick CIRS to observed
source
ERFA.atic13Method
atic13(ri, di, date1, date2)

Transform star RA,Dec from geocentric CIRS to ICRS astrometric.

Given

  • ri, di: CIRS geocentric RA,Dec (radians)
  • date1: TDB as a 2-part...
  • date2: ...Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • rc, dc: ICRS astrometric RA,Dec (radians)
  • eo: Equation of the origins (ERA-GST, Note 4)

Notes

  1. The TDB date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TDB)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience. For most applications of this function the choice will not be at all critical.

    TT can be used instead of TDB without any significant impact on accuracy.

  2. Iterative techniques are used for the aberration and light deflection corrections so that the functions atic13 (or aticq) and atci13 (or atciq) are accurate inverses; even at the edge of the Sun's disk the discrepancy is only about 1 nanoarcsecond.

  3. The available accuracy is better than 1 milliarcsecond, limited mainly by the precession-nutation model that is used, namely IAU 2000A/2006. Very close to solar system bodies, additional errors of up to several milliarcseconds can occur because of unmodeled light deflection; however, the Sun's contribution is taken into account, to first order. The accuracy limitations of the ERFA function epv00 (used to compute Earth position and velocity) can contribute aberration errors of up to 5 microarcseconds. Light deflection at the Sun's limb is uncertain at the 0.4 mas level.

  4. Should the transformation to (equinox based) J2000.0 mean place be required rather than (CIO based) ICRS coordinates, subtract the equation of the origins from the returned right ascension: RA = RI - EO. (The anp function can then be applied, as required, to keep the result in the conventional 0-2pi range.)

Called

  • apci13: astrometry parameters, ICRS-CIRS, 2013
  • aticq: quick CIRS to ICRS astrometric
source
ERFA.aticqMethod
aticq(ri, di, astrom)

Quick CIRS RA,Dec to ICRS astrometric place, given the star- independent astrometry parameters.

Use of this function is appropriate when efficiency is important and where many star positions are all to be transformed for one date. The star-independent astrometry parameters can be obtained by calling one of the functions apci[13], apcg[13], apco[13] or apcs[13].

Given

  • ri, di: CIRS RA,Dec (radians)
  • astrom: Star-independent astrometry parameters:
    • pmt: PM time interval (SSB, Julian years)
    • eb: SSB to observer (vector, au)
    • eh: Sun to observer (unit vector)
    • em: Distance from Sun to observer (au)
    • v: Barycentric observer velocity (vector, c)
    • bm1: $\sqrt{1-|v|^2}$ Reciprocal of Lorenz factor
    • bpn: Bias-precession-nutation matrix
    • along: Longitude + s' (radians)
    • xp1: Polar motion xp wrt local meridian (radians)
    • yp1: Polar motion yp wrt local meridian (radians)
    • sphi: Sine of geodetic latitude
    • cphi: Cosine of geodetic latitude
    • diurab: Magnitude of diurnal aberration vector
    • l: "Local" Earth rotation angle (radians)
    • refa: Refraction constant A (radians)
    • refb: Refraction constant B (radians)

Returned

  • rc, dc: ICRS astrometric RA,Dec (radians)

Notes

  1. Only the Sun is taken into account in the light deflection correction.

  2. Iterative techniques are used for the aberration and light deflection corrections so that the functions atic13 (or aticq) and atci13 (or atciq) are accurate inverses; even at the edge of the Sun's disk the discrepancy is only about 1 nanoarcsecond.

Called

  • s2c: spherical coordinates to unit vector
  • trxp: product of transpose of r-matrix and p-vector
  • zp: zero p-vector
  • ab: stellar aberration
  • ldsun: light deflection by the Sun
  • c2s: p-vector to spherical
  • anp: normalize angle into range +/- pi
source
ERFA.aticqnMethod
aticqn(ri, di, astrom, b::Array{LDBODY})

Quick CIRS to ICRS astrometric place transformation, given the star- independent astrometry parameters plus a list of light-deflecting bodies.

Use of this function is appropriate when efficiency is important and where many star positions are all to be transformed for one date. The star-independent astrometry parameters can be obtained by calling one of the functions apci[13], apcg[13], apco[13] or apcs[13].

Given

  • ri, di: CIRS RA,Dec (radians)
  • astrom: Star-independent astrometry parameters:
    • pmt: PM time interval (SSB, Julian years)
    • eb: SSB to observer (vector, au)
    • eh: Sun to observer (unit vector)
    • em: Distance from Sun to observer (au)
    • v: Barycentric observer velocity (vector, c)
    • bm1: $\sqrt{1-|v|^2}$ Reciprocal of Lorenz factor
    • bpn: Bias-precession-nutation matrix
    • along: Longitude + s' (radians)
    • xp1: Polar motion xp wrt local meridian (radians)
    • yp1: Polar motion yp wrt local meridian (radians)
    • sphi: Sine of geodetic latitude
    • cphi: Cosine of geodetic latitude
    • diurab: Magnitude of diurnal aberration vector
    • l: "Local" Earth rotation angle (radians)
    • refa: Refraction constant A (radians)
    • refb: Refraction constant B (radians)
  • n: Number of bodies (Note 3)
  • b::Vector{LDBODY}: Data for each of the n bodies (Notes 3,4):
    • bm: Mass of the body (solar masses, Note 5)
    • dl: Deflection limiter (Note 6)
    • pv: Barycentric PV of the body (au, au/day)

Returned

  • rc, dc: ICRS astrometric RA,Dec (radians)

Notes

  1. Iterative techniques are used for the aberration and light deflection corrections so that the functions aticqn and atciqn are accurate inverses; even at the edge of the Sun's disk the discrepancy is only about 1 nanoarcsecond.

  2. If the only light-deflecting body to be taken into account is the Sun, the aticq function can be used instead.

  3. The struct b contains n entries, one for each body to be considered. If n = 0, no gravitational light deflection will be applied, not even for the Sun.

  4. The struct b should include an entry for the Sun as well as for any planet or other body to be taken into account. The entries should be in the order in which the light passes the body.

  5. In the entry in the b struct for body i, the mass parameter b[i].bm can, as required, be adjusted in order to allow for such effects as quadrupole field.

  6. The deflection limiter parameter b[i].dl is phi^2/2, where phi is the angular separation (in radians) between star and body at which limiting is applied. As phi shrinks below the chosen threshold, the deflection is artificially reduced, reaching zero for phi = 0. Example values suitable for a terrestrial observer, together with masses, are as follows:

    body ib[i].bmb[i].dl
    Sun1.06e-6
    Jupiter0.000954353e-9
    Saturn0.000285743e-10
  7. For efficiency, validation of the contents of the b array is omitted. The supplied masses must be greater than zero, the position and velocity vectors must be right, and the deflection limiter greater than zero.

Called

  • s2c: spherical coordinates to unit vector
  • trxp: product of transpose of r-matrix and p-vector
  • zp: zero p-vector
  • ab: stellar aberration
  • ldn: light deflection by n bodies
  • c2s: p-vector to spherical
  • anp: normalize angle into range +/- pi
source
ERFA.atio13Method
atio13(ri, di, utc1, utc2, dut1, elong, phi, hm, xp, yp, phpa, tk, rh, wl)

CIRS RA,Dec to observed place. The caller supplies UTC, site coordinates, ambient air conditions and observing wavelength.

Given

  • ri: CIRS right ascension (CIO-based, radians)
  • di: CIRS declination (radians)
  • utc1: UTC as a 2-part...
  • utc2: ...quasi Julian Date (Notes 1,2)
  • dut1: UT1-UTC (seconds, Note 3)
  • elong: Longitude (radians, east +ve, Note 4)
  • phi: Geodetic latitude (radians, Note 4)
  • hm: Height above ellipsoid (m, geodetic Notes 4,6)
  • xp, yp: Polar motion coordinates (radians, Note 5)
  • phpa: Pressure at the observer (hPa = mB, Note 6)
  • tc: Ambient temperature at the observer (deg C)
  • rh: Relative humidity at the observer (range 0-1)
  • wl: Wavelength (micrometers, Note 7)

Returned

  • aob: Observed azimuth (radians: N=0,E=90)
  • zob: Observed zenith distance (radians)
  • hob: Observed hour angle (radians)
  • dob: Observed declination (radians)
  • rob: Observed right ascension (CIO-based, radians)

Notes

  1. utc1+utc2 is quasi Julian Date (see Note 2), apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments, for example where utc1 is the Julian Day Number and utc2 is the fraction of a day.

    However, JD cannot unambiguously represent UTC during a leap second unless special measures are taken. The convention in the present function is that the JD day represents UTC days whether the length is 86399, 86400 or 86401 SI seconds.

    Applications should use the function dtf2d to convert from calendar date and time of day into 2-part quasi Julian Date, as it implements the leap-second-ambiguity convention just described.

  2. The warning status "dubious year" flags UTCs that predate the introduction of the time scale or that are too far in the future to be trusted. See dat for further details.

  3. UT1-UTC is tabulated in IERS bulletins. It increases by exactly one second at the end of each positive UTC leap second, introduced in order to keep UT1-UTC within +/- 0.9s. n.b. This practice is under review, and in the future UT1-UTC may grow essentially without limit.

  4. The geographical coordinates are with respect to the WGS84 reference ellipsoid. TAKE CARE WITH THE LONGITUDE SIGN: the longitude required by the present function is east-positive (i.e. right-handed), in accordance with geographical convention.

  5. The polar motion xp,yp can be obtained from IERS bulletins. The values are the coordinates (in radians) of the Celestial Intermediate Pole with respect to the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003), measured along the meridians 0 and 90 deg west respectively. For many applications, xp and yp can be set to zero.

  6. If hm, the height above the ellipsoid of the observing station in meters, is not known but phpa, the pressure in hPa (=mB), is available, an adequate estimate of hm can be obtained from the expression

    hm = -29.3 * tsl * log ( phpa / 1013.25 );

    where tsl is the approximate sea-level air temperature in K (See Astrophysical Quantities, C.W.Allen, 3rd edition, section 52). Similarly, if the pressure phpa is not known, it can be estimated from the height of the observing station, hm, as follows:

    phpa = 1013.25 * exp ( -hm / ( 29.3 * tsl ) );

    Note, however, that the refraction is nearly proportional to the pressure and that an accurate phpa value is important for precise work.

  7. The argument wl specifies the observing wavelength in micrometers. The transition from optical to radio is assumed to occur at 100 micrometers (about 3000 GHz).

  8. "Observed" Az,ZD means the position that would be seen by a perfect geodetically aligned theodolite. (Zenith distance is used rather than altitude in order to reflect the fact that no allowance is made for depression of the horizon.) This is related to the observed HA,Dec via the standard rotation, using the geodetic latitude (corrected for polar motion), while the observed HA and RA are related simply through the Earth rotation angle and the site longitude. "Observed" RA,Dec or HA,Dec thus means the position that would be seen by a perfect equatorial with its polar axis aligned to the Earth's axis of rotation.

  9. The accuracy of the result is limited by the corrections for refraction, which use a simple $A*tan(z) + B*tan^3(z)$ model. Providing the meteorological parameters are known accurately and there are no gross local effects, the predicted astrometric coordinates should be within 0.05 arcsec (optical) or 1 arcsec (radio) for a zenith distance of less than 70 degrees, better than 30 arcsec (optical or radio) at 85 degrees and better than 20 arcmin (optical) or 30 arcmin (radio) at the horizon.

  10. The complementary functions atio13 and atoi13 are self- consistent to better than 1 microarcsecond all over the celestial sphere.

  11. It is advisable to take great care with units, as even unlikely values of the input parameters are accepted and processed in accordance with the models used.

Called

  • apio13: astrometry parameters, CIRS-observed, 2013
  • atioq: quick CIRS to observed
source
ERFA.atioqMethod
atioq(ri, di, astrom)

Quick CIRS to observed place transformation.

Use of this function is appropriate when efficiency is important and where many star positions are all to be transformed for one date. The star-independent astrometry parameters can be obtained by calling apio[13] or apco[13].

Given

  • ri: CIRS right ascension
  • di: CIRS declination
  • astrom: Star-independent astrometry parameters:
    • pmt: PM time interval (SSB, Julian years)
    • eb: SSB to observer (vector, au)
    • eh: Sun to observer (unit vector)
    • em: Distance from Sun to observer (au)
    • v: Barycentric observer velocity (vector, c)
    • bm1: $\sqrt{1-|v|^2}$ Reciprocal of Lorenz factor
    • bpn: Bias-precession-nutation matrix
    • along: Longitude + s' (radians)
    • xp1: Polar motion xp wrt local meridian (radians)
    • yp1: Polar motion yp wrt local meridian (radians)
    • sphi: Sine of geodetic latitude
    • cphi: Cosine of geodetic latitude
    • diurab: Magnitude of diurnal aberration vector
    • l: "Local" Earth rotation angle (radians)
    • refa: Refraction constant A (radians)
    • refb: Refraction constant B (radians)

Returned

  • aob: Observed azimuth (radians: N=0,E=90)
  • zob: Observed zenith distance (radians)
  • hob: Observed hour angle (radians)
  • dob: Observed declination (radians)
  • rob: Observed right ascension (CIO-based, radians)

Notes

  1. This function returns zenith distance rather than altitude in order to reflect the fact that no allowance is made for depression of the horizon.

  2. The accuracy of the result is limited by the corrections for refraction, which use a simple $A*tan(z) + B*tan^3(z)$ model. Providing the meteorological parameters are known accurately and there are no gross local effects, the predicted observed coordinates should be within 0.05 arcsec (optical) or 1 arcsec (radio) for a zenith distance of less than 70 degrees, better than 30 arcsec (optical or radio) at 85 degrees and better than 20 arcmin (optical) or 30 arcmin (radio) at the horizon.

    Without refraction, the complementary functions atioq and atoiq are self-consistent to better than 1 microarcsecond all over the celestial sphere. With refraction included, consistency falls off at high zenith distances, but is still better than 0.05 arcsec at 85 degrees.

  3. It is advisable to take great care with units, as even unlikely values of the input parameters are accepted and processed in accordance with the models used.

  4. The CIRS RA,Dec is obtained from a star catalog mean place by allowing for space motion, parallax, the Sun's gravitational lens effect, annual aberration and precession-nutation. For star positions in the ICRS, these effects can be applied by means of the atci13 (etc.) functions. Starting from classical "mean place" systems, additional transformations will be needed first.

  5. "Observed" Az,El means the position that would be seen by a perfect geodetically aligned theodolite. This is obtained from the CIRS RA,Dec by allowing for Earth orientation and diurnal aberration, rotating from equator to horizon coordinates, and then adjusting for refraction. The HA,Dec is obtained by rotating back into equatorial coordinates, and is the position that would be seen by a perfect equatorial with its polar axis aligned to the Earth's axis of rotation. Finally, the RA is obtained by subtracting the HA from the local ERA.

  6. The star-independent CIRS-to-observed-place parameters in ASTROM may be computed with apio[13] or apco[13]. If nothing has changed significantly except the time, aper[13] may be used to perform the requisite adjustment to the astrom structure.

Called

  • s2c: spherical coordinates to unit vector
  • c2s: p-vector to spherical
  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi
source
ERFA.atoc13Method
atoc13(typeofcoordinates, ob1, ob2, utc1, utc2, dut1, elong, phi, hm, xp, yp, phpa, tk, rh, wl)

Observed place at a groundbased site to to ICRS astrometric RA,Dec. The caller supplies UTC, site coordinates, ambient air conditions and observing wavelength.

Given

  • type: Type of coordinates - "R", "H" or "A" (Notes 1,2)
  • ob1: Observed Az, HA or RA (radians; Az is N=0,E=90)
  • ob2: Observed ZD or Dec (radians)
  • utc1: UTC as a 2-part...
  • utc2: ...quasi Julian Date (Notes 3,4)
  • dut1: UT1-UTC (seconds, Note 5)
  • elong: Longitude (radians, east +ve, Note 6)
  • phi: Geodetic latitude (radians, Note 6)
  • hm: Height above ellipsoid (m, geodetic Notes 6,8)
  • xp, yp: Polar motion coordinates (radians, Note 7)
  • phpa: Pressure at the observer (hPa = mB, Note 8)
  • tc: Ambient temperature at the observer (deg C)
  • rh: Relative humidity at the observer (range 0-1)
  • wl: Wavelength (micrometers, Note 9)

Returned

  • rc, dc: ICRS astrometric RA,Dec (radians)

Notes

  1. "Observed" Az,ZD means the position that would be seen by a perfect geodetically aligned theodolite. (Zenith distance is used rather than altitude in order to reflect the fact that no allowance is made for depression of the horizon.) This is related to the observed HA,Dec via the standard rotation, using the geodetic latitude (corrected for polar motion), while the observed HA and RA are related simply through the Earth rotation angle and the site longitude. "Observed" RA,Dec or HA,Dec thus means the position that would be seen by a perfect equatorial with its polar axis aligned to the Earth's axis of rotation.

  2. Only the first character of the type argument is significant. "R" or "r" indicates that ob1 and ob2 are the observed right ascension and declination; "H" or "h" indicates that they are hour angle (west +ve) and declination; anything else ("A" or "a" is recommended) indicates that ob1 and ob2 are azimuth (north zero, east 90 deg) and zenith distance.

  3. utc1+utc2 is quasi Julian Date (see Note 2), apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments, for example where utc1 is the Julian Day Number and utc2 is the fraction of a day.

    However, JD cannot unambiguously represent UTC during a leap second unless special measures are taken. The convention in the present function is that the JD day represents UTC days whether the length is 86399, 86400 or 86401 SI seconds.

    Applications should use the function dtf2d to convert from calendar date and time of day into 2-part quasi Julian Date, as it implements the leap-second-ambiguity convention just described.

  4. The warning status "dubious year" flags UTCs that predate the introduction of the time scale or that are too far in the future to be trusted. See dat for further details.

  5. UT1-UTC is tabulated in IERS bulletins. It increases by exactly one second at the end of each positive UTC leap second, introduced in order to keep UT1-UTC within +/- 0.9s. n.b. This practice is under review, and in the future UT1-UTC may grow essentially without limit.

  6. The geographical coordinates are with respect to the WGS84 reference ellipsoid. TAKE CARE WITH THE LONGITUDE SIGN: the longitude required by the present function is east-positive (i.e. right-handed), in accordance with geographical convention.

  7. The polar motion xp,yp can be obtained from IERS bulletins. The values are the coordinates (in radians) of the Celestial Intermediate Pole with respect to the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003), measured along the meridians 0 and 90 deg west respectively. For many applications, xp and yp can be set to zero.

  8. If hm, the height above the ellipsoid of the observing station in meters, is not known but phpa, the pressure in hPa (=mB), is available, an adequate estimate of hm can be obtained from the expression

    hm = -29.3 * tsl * log ( phpa / 1013.25 );

    where tsl is the approximate sea-level air temperature in K (See Astrophysical Quantities, C.W.Allen, 3rd edition, section 52). Similarly, if the pressure phpa is not known, it can be estimated from the height of the observing station, hm, as follows:

    phpa = 1013.25 * exp ( -hm / ( 29.3 * tsl ) );

    Note, however, that the refraction is nearly proportional to the pressure and that an accurate phpa value is important for precise work.

  9. The argument wl specifies the observing wavelength in micrometers. The transition from optical to radio is assumed to occur at 100 micrometers (about 3000 GHz).

  10. The accuracy of the result is limited by the corrections for refraction, which use a simple $A*tan(z) + B*tan^3(z)$ model. Providing the meteorological parameters are known accurately and there are no gross local effects, the predicted astrometric coordinates should be within 0.05 arcsec (optical) or 1 arcsec (radio) for a zenith distance of less than 70 degrees, better than 30 arcsec (optical or radio) at 85 degrees and better than 20 arcmin (optical) or 30 arcmin (radio) at the horizon.

    Without refraction, the complementary functions atco13 and atoc13 are self-consistent to better than 1 microarcsecond all over the celestial sphere. With refraction included, consistency falls off at high zenith distances, but is still better than 0.05 arcsec at 85 degrees.

  11. It is advisable to take great care with units, as even unlikely values of the input parameters are accepted and processed in accordance with the models used.

Called

  • apco13: astrometry parameters, ICRS-observed
  • atoiq: quick observed to CIRS
  • aticq: quick CIRS to ICRS
source
ERFA.atoi13Method
atoi13(typeofcoordinates, ob1, ob2, utc1, utc2, dut1, elong, phi, hm, xp, yp, phpa, tk, rh, wl)

Observed place to CIRS. The caller supplies UTC, site coordinates, ambient air conditions and observing wavelength.

Given

  • type: Type of coordinates - "R", "H" or "A" (Notes 1,2)
  • ob1: Observed Az, HA or RA (radians; Az is N=0,E=90)
  • ob2: Observed ZD or Dec (radians)
  • utc1: UTC as a 2-part...
  • utc2: ...quasi Julian Date (Notes 3,4)
  • dut1: UT1-UTC (seconds, Note 5)
  • elong: Longitude (radians, east +ve, Note 6)
  • phi: Geodetic latitude (radians, Note 6)
  • hm: Height above the ellipsoid (meters, Notes 6,8)
  • xp, yp: Polar motion coordinates (radians, Note 7)
  • phpa: Pressure at the observer (hPa = mB, Note 8)
  • tc: Ambient temperature at the observer (deg C)
  • rh: Relative humidity at the observer (range 0-1)
  • wl: Wavelength (micrometers, Note 9)

Returned

  • ri: CIRS right ascension (CIO-based, radians)
  • di: CIRS declination (radians)

Notes

  1. "Observed" Az,ZD means the position that would be seen by a perfect geodetically aligned theodolite. (Zenith distance is used rather than altitude in order to reflect the fact that no allowance is made for depression of the horizon.) This is related to the observed HA,Dec via the standard rotation, using the geodetic latitude (corrected for polar motion), while the observed HA and RA are related simply through the Earth rotation angle and the site longitude. "Observed" RA,Dec or HA,Dec thus means the position that would be seen by a perfect equatorial with its polar axis aligned to the Earth's axis of rotation.

  2. Only the first character of the type argument is significant. "R" or "r" indicates that ob1 and ob2 are the observed right ascension and declination; "H" or "h" indicates that they are hour angle (west +ve) and declination; anything else ("A" or "a" is recommended) indicates that ob1 and ob2 are azimuth (north zero, east 90 deg) and zenith distance.

  3. utc1+utc2 is quasi Julian Date (see Note 2), apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments, for example where utc1 is the Julian Day Number and utc2 is the fraction of a day.

    However, JD cannot unambiguously represent UTC during a leap second unless special measures are taken. The convention in the present function is that the JD day represents UTC days whether the length is 86399, 86400 or 86401 SI seconds.

    Applications should use the function dtf2d to convert from calendar date and time of day into 2-part quasi Julian Date, as it implements the leap-second-ambiguity convention just described.

  4. The warning status "dubious year" flags UTCs that predate the introduction of the time scale or that are too far in the future to be trusted. See dat for further details.

  5. UT1-UTC is tabulated in IERS bulletins. It increases by exactly one second at the end of each positive UTC leap second, introduced in order to keep UT1-UTC within +/- 0.9s. n.b. This practice is under review, and in the future UT1-UTC may grow essentially without limit.

  6. The geographical coordinates are with respect to the WGS84 reference ellipsoid. TAKE CARE WITH THE LONGITUDE SIGN: the longitude required by the present function is east-positive (i.e. right-handed), in accordance with geographical convention.

  7. The polar motion xp,yp can be obtained from IERS bulletins. The values are the coordinates (in radians) of the Celestial Intermediate Pole with respect to the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003), measured along the meridians 0 and 90 deg west respectively. For many applications, xp and yp can be set to zero.

  8. If hm, the height above the ellipsoid of the observing station in meters, is not known but phpa, the pressure in hPa (=mB), is available, an adequate estimate of hm can be obtained from the expression

    hm = -29.3 * tsl * log ( phpa / 1013.25 );

    where tsl is the approximate sea-level air temperature in K (See Astrophysical Quantities, C.W.Allen, 3rd edition, section 52). Similarly, if the pressure phpa is not known, it can be estimated from the height of the observing station, hm, as follows:

    phpa = 1013.25 * exp ( -hm / ( 29.3 * tsl ) );

    Note, however, that the refraction is nearly proportional to the pressure and that an accurate phpa value is important for precise work.

  9. The argument wl specifies the observing wavelength in micrometers. The transition from optical to radio is assumed to occur at 100 micrometers (about 3000 GHz).

  10. The accuracy of the result is limited by the corrections for refraction, which use a simple $A*tan(z) + B*tan^3(z)$ model. Providing the meteorological parameters are known accurately and there are no gross local effects, the predicted astrometric coordinates should be within 0.05 arcsec (optical) or 1 arcsec (radio) for a zenith distance of less than 70 degrees, better than 30 arcsec (optical or radio) at 85 degrees and better than 20 arcmin (optical) or 30 arcmin (radio) at the horizon.

    Without refraction, the complementary functions atio13 and atoi13 are self-consistent to better than 1 microarcsecond all over the celestial sphere. With refraction included, consistency falls off at high zenith distances, but is still better than 0.05 arcsec at 85 degrees.

  11. It is advisable to take great care with units, as even unlikely values of the input parameters are accepted and processed in accordance with the models used.

Called

  • apio13: astrometry parameters, CIRS-observed, 2013
  • atoiq: quick observed to CIRS
source
ERFA.atoiqMethod
atoiq(typeofcoordinates, ob1, ob2, astrom)

Quick observed place to CIRS, given the star-independent astrometry parameters.

Use of this function is appropriate when efficiency is important and where many star positions are all to be transformed for one date. The star-independent astrometry parameters can be obtained by calling apio[13] or apco[13].

Given

  • type: Type of coordinates: "R", "H" or "A" (Note 1)
  • ob1: Observed Az, HA or RA (radians; Az is N=0,E=90)
  • ob2: Observed ZD or Dec (radians)
  • astrom: Star-independent astrometry parameters:
    • pmt: PM time interval (SSB, Julian years)
    • eb: SSB to observer (vector, au)
    • eh: Sun to observer (unit vector)
    • em: Distance from Sun to observer (au)
    • v: Barycentric observer velocity (vector, c)
    • bm1: $\sqrt{1-|v|^2}$ Reciprocal of Lorenz factor
    • bpn: Bias-precession-nutation matrix
    • along: Longitude + s' (radians)
    • xp1: Polar motion xp wrt local meridian (radians)
    • yp1: Polar motion yp wrt local meridian (radians)
    • sphi: Sine of geodetic latitude
    • cphi: Cosine of geodetic latitude
    • diurab: Magnitude of diurnal aberration vector
    • l: "Local" Earth rotation angle (radians)
    • refa: Refraction constant A (radians)
    • refb: Refraction constant B (radians)

Returned

  • ri: CIRS right ascension (CIO-based, radians)
  • di: CIRS declination (radians)

Notes

  1. "Observed" Az,El means the position that would be seen by a perfect geodetically aligned theodolite. This is related to the observed HA,Dec via the standard rotation, using the geodetic latitude (corrected for polar motion), while the observed HA and RA are related simply through the Earth rotation angle and the site longitude. "Observed" RA,Dec or HA,Dec thus means the position that would be seen by a perfect equatorial with its polar axis aligned to the Earth's axis of rotation. By removing from the observed place the effects of atmospheric refraction and diurnal aberration, the CIRS RA,Dec is obtained.

  2. Only the first character of the type argument is significant. "R" or "r" indicates that ob1 and ob2 are the observed right ascension and declination; "H" or "h" indicates that they are hour angle (west +ve) and declination; anything else ("A" or "a" is recommended) indicates that ob1 and ob2 are azimuth (north zero, east 90 deg) and zenith distance. (Zenith distance is used rather than altitude in order to reflect the fact that no allowance is made for depression of the horizon.)

  3. The accuracy of the result is limited by the corrections for refraction, which use a simple $A*tan(z) + B*tan^3(z)$ model. Providing the meteorological parameters are known accurately and there are no gross local effects, the predicted observed coordinates should be within 0.05 arcsec (optical) or 1 arcsec (radio) for a zenith distance of less than 70 degrees, better than 30 arcsec (optical or radio) at 85 degrees and better than 20 arcmin (optical) or 30 arcmin (radio) at the horizon.

    Without refraction, the complementary functions atioq and atoiq are self-consistent to better than 1 microarcsecond all over the celestial sphere. With refraction included, consistency falls off at high zenith distances, but is still better than 0.05 arcsec at 85 degrees.

  4. It is advisable to take great care with units, as even unlikely values of the input parameters are accepted and processed in accordance with the models used.

Called

  • s2c: spherical coordinates to unit vector
  • c2s: p-vector to spherical
  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi
source
ERFA.bi00Method
bi00()

Frame bias components of IAU 2000 precession-nutation models (part of MHB2000 with additions).

Returned

  • dpsibi, depsbi: Longitude and obliquity corrections
  • dra: The ICRS RA of the J2000.0 mean equinox

Notes

  1. The frame bias corrections in longitude and obliquity (radians) are required in order to correct for the offset between the GCRS pole and the mean J2000.0 pole. They define, with respect to the GCRS frame, a J2000.0 mean pole that is consistent with the rest of the IAU 2000A precession-nutation model.

  2. In addition to the displacement of the pole, the complete description of the frame bias requires also an offset in right ascension. This is not part of the IAU 2000A model, and is from Chapront et al. (2002). It is returned in radians.

  3. This is a supplemented implementation of one aspect of the IAU 2000A nutation model, formally adopted by the IAU General Assembly in 2000, namely MHB2000 (Mathews et al. 2002).

References

  • Chapront, J., Chapront-Touze, M. & Francou, G., Astron. Astrophys., 387, 700, 2002.

  • Mathews, P.M., Herring, T.A., Buffet, B.A., "Modeling of nutation and precession: New nutation series for nonrigid Earth and insights into the Earth's interior", J.Geophys.Res., 107, B4, 2002. The MHB2000 code itself was obtained on 9th September 2002 from ftp://maia.usno.navy.mil/conv2000/chapter5/IAU2000A.

source
ERFA.bp00Function
bp00(date1, date2)

Frame bias and precession, IAU 2000.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • rb: Frame bias matrix (Note 2)
  • rp: Precession matrix (Note 3)
  • rbp: Bias-precession matrix (Note 4)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The matrix rb transforms vectors from GCRS to mean J2000.0 by applying frame bias.

  3. The matrix rp transforms vectors from J2000.0 mean equator and equinox to mean equator and equinox of date by applying precession.

  4. The matrix rbp transforms vectors from GCRS to mean equator and equinox of date by applying frame bias then precession. It is the product rp x rb.

  5. It is permissible to re-use the same array in the returned arguments. The arrays are filled in the order given.

Called

  • bi00: frame bias components, IAU 2000
  • pr00: IAU 2000 precession adjustments
  • ir: initialize r-matrix to identity
  • rx: rotate around X-axis
  • ry: rotate around Y-axis
  • rz: rotate around Z-axis
  • cr: copy r-matrix
  • rxr: product of two r-matrices

Reference

  • "Expressions for the Celestial Intermediate Pole and Celestial Ephemeris Origin consistent with the IAU 2000A precession- nutation model", Astron.Astrophys. 400, 1145-1154 (2003)

  • n.b. The celestial ephemeris origin (CEO) was renamed "celestial intermediate origin" (CIO) by IAU 2006 Resolution 2.

source
ERFA.bp06Function
bp06(date1, date2)

Frame bias and precession, IAU 2006.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • rb: Frame bias matrix (Note 2)
  • rp: Precession matrix (Note 3)
  • rbp: Bias-precession matrix (Note 4)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The matrix rb transforms vectors from GCRS to mean J2000.0 by applying frame bias.

  3. The matrix rp transforms vectors from mean J2000.0 to mean of date by applying precession.

  4. The matrix rbp transforms vectors from GCRS to mean of date by applying frame bias then precession. It is the product rp x rb.

  5. It is permissible to re-use the same array in the returned arguments. The arrays are filled in the order given.

Called

  • pfw06: bias-precession F-W angles, IAU 2006
  • fw2m: F-W angles to r-matrix
  • pmat06: PB matrix, IAU 2006
  • tr: transpose r-matrix
  • rxr: product of two r-matrices
  • cr: copy r-matrix

References

  • Capitaine, N. & Wallace, P.T., 2006, Astron.Astrophys. 450, 855

  • Wallace, P.T. & Capitaine, N., 2006, Astron.Astrophys. 459, 981

source
ERFA.bpn2xyMethod
bpn2xy(rbpn)

Extract from the bias-precession-nutation matrix the X,Y coordinates of the Celestial Intermediate Pole.

Given

  • rbpn: Celestial-to-true matrix (Note 1)

Returned

  • x, y: Celestial Intermediate Pole (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The matrix rbpn transforms vectors from GCRS to true equator (and CIO or equinox) of date, and therefore the Celestial Intermediate Pole unit vector is the bottom row of the matrix.

  2. The arguments x,y are components of the Celestial Intermediate Pole unit vector in the Geocentric Celestial Reference System.

Reference

  • "Expressions for the Celestial Intermediate Pole and Celestial Ephemeris Origin consistent with the IAU 2000A precession- nutation model", Astron.Astrophys. 400, 1145-1154 (2003)

  • n.b. The celestial ephemeris origin (CEO) was renamed "celestial intermediate origin" (CIO) by IAU 2006 Resolution 2.

source
ERFA.c2i00aFunction
c2i00a(a, b)

Form the celestial-to-intermediate matrix for a given date using the IAU 2000A precession-nutation model.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • rc2i: Celestial-to-intermediate matrix (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The matrix rc2i is the first stage in the transformation from celestial to terrestrial coordinates:

    [TRS] = RPOM * R_3(ERA) * rc2i * [CRS] = rc2t * [CRS]

    where [CRS] is a vector in the Geocentric Celestial Reference System and [TRS] is a vector in the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003), ERA is the Earth Rotation Angle and RPOM is the polar motion matrix.

  3. A faster, but slightly less accurate result (about 1 mas), can be obtained by using instead the c2i00b function.

Called

  • pnm00a: classical NPB matrix, IAU 2000A
  • c2ibpn: celestial-to-intermediate matrix, given NPB matrix

References

  • "Expressions for the Celestial Intermediate Pole and Celestial Ephemeris Origin consistent with the IAU 2000A precession- nutation model", Astron.Astrophys. 400, 1145-1154 (2003)

  • n.b. The celestial ephemeris origin (CEO) was renamed "celestial intermediate origin" (CIO) by IAU 2006 Resolution 2.

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

source
ERFA.c2i00bFunction
c2i00b(a, b)

Form the celestial-to-intermediate matrix for a given date using the IAU 2000B precession-nutation model.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • rc2i: Celestial-to-intermediate matrix (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The matrix rc2i is the first stage in the transformation from celestial to terrestrial coordinates:

    [TRS] = RPOM * R_3(ERA) * rc2i * [CRS] = rc2t * [CRS]

    where [CRS] is a vector in the Geocentric Celestial Reference System and [TRS] is a vector in the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003), ERA is the Earth Rotation Angle and RPOM is the polar motion matrix.

  3. The present function is faster, but slightly less accurate (about 1 mas), than the c2i00a function.

Called

  • pnm00b: classical NPB matrix, IAU 2000B
  • c2ibpn: celestial-to-intermediate matrix, given NPB matrix

References

  • "Expressions for the Celestial Intermediate Pole and Celestial Ephemeris Origin consistent with the IAU 2000A precession- nutation model", Astron.Astrophys. 400, 1145-1154 (2003)

  • n.b. The celestial ephemeris origin (CEO) was renamed "celestial intermediate origin" (CIO) by IAU 2006 Resolution 2.

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

source
ERFA.c2i06aFunction
c2i06a(a, b)

Form the celestial-to-intermediate matrix for a given date using the IAU 2006 precession and IAU 2000A nutation models.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • rc2i: Celestial-to-intermediate matrix (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The matrix rc2i is the first stage in the transformation from celestial to terrestrial coordinates:

    [TRS] = RPOM * R_3(ERA) * rc2i * [CRS] = RC2T * [CRS]

    where [CRS] is a vector in the Geocentric Celestial Reference System and [TRS] is a vector in the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003), ERA is the Earth Rotation Angle and RPOM is the polar motion matrix.

Called

  • pnm06a: classical NPB matrix, IAU 2006/2000A
  • bpn2xy: extract CIP X,Y coordinates from NPB matrix
  • s06: the CIO locator s, given X,Y, IAU 2006
  • c2ixys: celestial-to-intermediate matrix, given X,Y and s

References

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), 2004, IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG
source
ERFA.c2ibpnMethod
c2ibpn(date1, date2, rbpn)

Form the celestial-to-intermediate matrix for a given date given the bias-precession-nutation matrix. IAU 2000.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)
  • rbpn: Celestial-to-true matrix (Note 2)

Returned

  • rc2i: Celestial-to-intermediate matrix (Note 3)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The matrix rbpn transforms vectors from GCRS to true equator (and CIO or equinox) of date. Only the CIP (bottom row) is used.

  3. The matrix rc2i is the first stage in the transformation from celestial to terrestrial coordinates:

    [TRS] = RPOM * R_3(ERA) * rc2i * [CRS] = RC2T * [CRS]

    where [CRS] is a vector in the Geocentric Celestial Reference System and [TRS] is a vector in the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003), ERA is the Earth Rotation Angle and RPOM is the polar motion matrix.

  4. Although its name does not include "00", This function is in fact specific to the IAU 2000 models.

Called

  • bpn2xy: extract CIP X,Y coordinates from NPB matrix
  • c2ixy: celestial-to-intermediate matrix, given X,Y

References

  • "Expressions for the Celestial Intermediate Pole and Celestial Ephemeris Origin consistent with the IAU 2000A precession- nutation model", Astron.Astrophys. 400, 1145-1154 (2003)

  • n.b. The celestial ephemeris origin (CEO) was renamed "celestial intermediate origin" (CIO) by IAU 2006 Resolution 2.

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

source
ERFA.c2ixyMethod
c2ixy(x, y, s, t)

Form the celestial to intermediate-frame-of-date matrix for a given date when the CIP X,Y coordinates are known. IAU 2000.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)
  • x, y: Celestial Intermediate Pole (Note 2)

Returned

  • rc2i: Celestial-to-intermediate matrix (Note 3)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The Celestial Intermediate Pole coordinates are the x,y components of the unit vector in the Geocentric Celestial Reference System.

  3. The matrix rc2i is the first stage in the transformation from celestial to terrestrial coordinates:

    [TRS] = RPOM * R_3(ERA) * rc2i * [CRS] = RC2T * [CRS]

    where [CRS] is a vector in the Geocentric Celestial Reference System and [TRS] is a vector in the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003), ERA is the Earth Rotation Angle and RPOM is the polar motion matrix.

  4. Although its name does not include "00", This function is in fact specific to the IAU 2000 models.

Called

  • c2ixys: celestial-to-intermediate matrix, given X,Y and s
  • s00: the CIO locator s, given X,Y, IAU 2000A

Reference

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)
source
ERFA.c2ixysMethod
c2ixys(x, y, s)

Form the celestial to intermediate-frame-of-date matrix given the CIP X,Y and the CIO locator s.

Given

  • x, y: Celestial Intermediate Pole (Note 1)
  • s: The CIO locator s (Note 2)

Returned

  • rc2i: Celestial-to-intermediate matrix (Note 3)

Notes

  1. The Celestial Intermediate Pole coordinates are the x,y components of the unit vector in the Geocentric Celestial Reference System.

  2. The CIO locator s (in radians) positions the Celestial Intermediate Origin on the equator of the CIP.

  3. The matrix rc2i is the first stage in the transformation from celestial to terrestrial coordinates:

    [TRS] = RPOM * R_3(ERA) * rc2i * [CRS] = RC2T * [CRS]

    where [CRS] is a vector in the Geocentric Celestial Reference System and [TRS] is a vector in the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003), ERA is the Earth Rotation Angle and RPOM is the polar motion matrix.

Called

  • ir: initialize r-matrix to identity
  • rz: rotate around Z-axis
  • ry: rotate around Y-axis

Reference

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)
source
ERFA.c2sMethod
c2s(p)

P-vector to spherical coordinates.

Given

  • p: P-vector

Returned

  • theta: Longitude angle (radians)
  • phi: Latitude angle (radians)

Notes

  1. The vector p can have any magnitude; only its direction is used.

  2. If p is null, zero theta and phi are returned.

  3. At either pole, zero theta is returned.

source
ERFA.c2t00aFunction
c2t00a(tta, ttb, uta, utb, xp, yp)

Form the celestial to terrestrial matrix given the date, the UT1 and the polar motion, using the IAU 2000A nutation model.

Given

  • tta, ttb: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)
  • uta, utb: UT1 as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)
  • xp, yp: Coordinates of the pole (radians, Note 2)

Returned

  • rc2t: Celestial-to-terrestrial matrix (Note 3)

Notes

  1. The TT and UT1 dates tta+ttb and uta+utb are Julian Dates, apportioned in any convenient way between the arguments uta and utb. For example, JD(UT1)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    utautbMethod
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 and MJD methods are good compromises between resolution and convenience. In the case of uta,utb, the date & time method is best matched to the Earth rotation angle algorithm used: maximum precision is delivered when the uta argument is for 0hrs UT1 on the day in question and the utb argument lies in the range 0 to 1, or vice versa.

  2. The arguments xp and yp are the coordinates (in radians) of the Celestial Intermediate Pole with respect to the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003), measured along the meridians to 0 and 90 deg west respectively.

  3. The matrix rc2t transforms from celestial to terrestrial coordinates:

    [TRS] = RPOM * R_3(ERA) * RC2I * [CRS] = rc2t * [CRS]

    where [CRS] is a vector in the Geocentric Celestial Reference System and [TRS] is a vector in the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003), RC2I is the celestial-to-intermediate matrix, ERA is the Earth rotation angle and RPOM is the polar motion matrix.

  4. A faster, but slightly less accurate result (about 1 mas), can be obtained by using instead the c2t00b function.

Called

  • c2i00a: celestial-to-intermediate matrix, IAU 2000A
  • era00: Earth rotation angle, IAU 2000
  • sp00: the TIO locator s', IERS 2000
  • pom00: polar motion matrix
  • c2tcio: form CIO-based celestial-to-terrestrial matrix

Reference

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)
source
ERFA.c2t00bFunction
c2t00b(tta, ttb, uta, utb, xp, yp)

Form the celestial to terrestrial matrix given the date, the UT1 and the polar motion, using the IAU 2000B nutation model.

Given

  • tta, ttb: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)
  • uta, utb: UT1 as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)
  • xp, yp: Coordinates of the pole (radians, Note 2)

Returned

  • rc2t: Celestial-to-terrestrial matrix (Note 3)

Notes

  1. The TT and UT1 dates tta+ttb and uta+utb are Julian Dates, apportioned in any convenient way between the arguments uta and utb. For example, JD(UT1)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    utautbMethod
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 and MJD methods are good compromises between resolution and convenience. In the case of uta,utb, the date & time method is best matched to the Earth rotation angle algorithm used: maximum precision is delivered when the uta argument is for 0hrs UT1 on the day in question and the utb argument lies in the range 0 to 1, or vice versa.

  2. The arguments xp and yp are the coordinates (in radians) of the Celestial Intermediate Pole with respect to the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003), measured along the meridians to 0 and 90 deg west respectively.

  3. The matrix rc2t transforms from celestial to terrestrial coordinates:

    [TRS] = RPOM * R_3(ERA) * RC2I * [CRS] = rc2t * [CRS]

    where [CRS] is a vector in the Geocentric Celestial Reference System and [TRS] is a vector in the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003), RC2I is the celestial-to-intermediate matrix, ERA is the Earth rotation angle and RPOM is the polar motion matrix.

  4. The present function is faster, but slightly less accurate (about 1 mas), than the c2t00a function.

Called

  • c2i00b: celestial-to-intermediate matrix, IAU 2000B
  • era00: Earth rotation angle, IAU 2000
  • pom00: polar motion matrix
  • c2tcio: form CIO-based celestial-to-terrestrial matrix

Reference

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)
source
ERFA.c2t06aFunction
c2t06a(tta, ttb, uta, utb, xp, yp)

Form the celestial to terrestrial matrix given the date, the UT1 and the polar motion, using the IAU 2006 precession and IAU 2000A nutation models.

Given

  • tta, ttb: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)
  • uta, utb: UT1 as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)
  • xp, yp: Coordinates of the pole (radians, Note 2)

Returned

  • rc2t: Celestial-to-terrestrial matrix (Note 3)

Notes

  1. The TT and UT1 dates tta+ttb and uta+utb are Julian Dates, apportioned in any convenient way between the arguments uta and utb. For example, JD(UT1)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    utautbMethod
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 and MJD methods are good compromises between resolution and convenience. In the case of uta,utb, the date & time method is best matched to the Earth rotation angle algorithm used: maximum precision is delivered when the uta argument is for 0hrs UT1 on the day in question and the utb argument lies in the range 0 to 1, or vice versa.

  2. The arguments xp and yp are the coordinates (in radians) of the Celestial Intermediate Pole with respect to the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003), measured along the meridians to 0 and 90 deg west respectively.

  3. The matrix rc2t transforms from celestial to terrestrial coordinates:

    [TRS] = RPOM * R_3(ERA) * RC2I * [CRS] = rc2t * [CRS]

    where [CRS] is a vector in the Geocentric Celestial Reference System and [TRS] is a vector in the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003), RC2I is the celestial-to-intermediate matrix, ERA is the Earth rotation angle and RPOM is the polar motion matrix.

Called

  • c2i06a: celestial-to-intermediate matrix, IAU 2006/2000A
  • era00: Earth rotation angle, IAU 2000
  • sp00: the TIO locator s', IERS 2000
  • pom00: polar motion matrix
  • c2tcio: form CIO-based celestial-to-terrestrial matrix

Reference

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), 2004, IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG
source
ERFA.c2tcioFunction
c2tcio(rc2i, era, rpom)

Assemble the celestial to terrestrial matrix from CIO-based components (the celestial-to-intermediate matrix, the Earth Rotation Angle and the polar motion matrix).

Given

  • rc2i: Celestial-to-intermediate matrix
  • era: Earth rotation angle (radians)
  • rpom: Polar-motion matrix

Returned

  • rc2t: Celestial-to-terrestrial matrix

Notes

  1. This function constructs the rotation matrix that transforms vectors in the celestial system into vectors in the terrestrial system. It does so starting from precomputed components, namely the matrix which rotates from celestial coordinates to the intermediate frame, the Earth rotation angle and the polar motion matrix. One use of the present function is when generating a series of celestial-to-terrestrial matrices where only the Earth Rotation Angle changes, avoiding the considerable overhead of recomputing the precession-nutation more often than necessary to achieve given accuracy objectives.

  2. The relationship between the arguments is as follows:

    [TRS] = RPOM * R_3(ERA) * rc2i * [CRS] = rc2t * [CRS]

    where [CRS] is a vector in the Geocentric Celestial Reference System and [TRS] is a vector in the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003).

Called

  • cr: copy r-matrix
  • rz: rotate around Z-axis
  • rxr: product of two r-matrices

Reference

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), 2004, IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG
source
ERFA.c2teqxFunction
c2teqx(rc2i, era, rpom)

Assemble the celestial to terrestrial matrix from equinox-based components (the celestial-to-true matrix, the Greenwich Apparent Sidereal Time and the polar motion matrix).

Given

  • rbpn: Celestial-to-true matrix
  • gst: Greenwich (apparent) Sidereal Time (radians)
  • rpom: Polar-motion matrix

Returned

  • rc2t: Celestial-to-terrestrial matrix (Note 2)

Notes

  1. This function constructs the rotation matrix that transforms vectors in the celestial system into vectors in the terrestrial system. It does so starting from precomputed components, namely the matrix which rotates from celestial coordinates to the true equator and equinox of date, the Greenwich Apparent Sidereal Time and the polar motion matrix. One use of the present function is when generating a series of celestial-to-terrestrial matrices where only the Sidereal Time changes, avoiding the considerable overhead of recomputing the precession-nutation more often than necessary to achieve given accuracy objectives.

  2. The relationship between the arguments is as follows:

    [TRS] = rpom * R_3(gst) * rbpn * [CRS] = rc2t * [CRS]

    where [CRS] is a vector in the Geocentric Celestial Reference System and [TRS] is a vector in the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003).

Called

  • cr: copy r-matrix
  • rz: rotate around Z-axis
  • rxr: product of two r-matrices

Reference

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)
source
ERFA.c2tpeFunction
c2tpe(tta, ttb, uta, utb, x, y, xp, yp)

Form the celestial to terrestrial matrix given the date, the UT1, the nutation and the polar motion. IAU 2000.

Given

  • tta, ttb: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)
  • uta, utb: UT1 as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)
  • dpsi, deps: Nutation (Note 2)
  • xp, yp: Coordinates of the pole (radians, Note 3)

Returned

  • rc2t: Celestial-to-terrestrial matrix (Note 4)

Notes

  1. The TT and UT1 dates tta+ttb and uta+utb are Julian Dates, apportioned in any convenient way between the arguments uta and utb. For example, JD(UT1)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    utautbMethod
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 and MJD methods are good compromises between resolution and convenience. In the case of uta,utb, the date & time method is best matched to the Earth rotation angle algorithm used: maximum precision is delivered when the uta argument is for 0hrs UT1 on the day in question and the utb argument lies in the range 0 to 1, or vice versa.

  2. The caller is responsible for providing the nutation components; they are in longitude and obliquity, in radians and are with respect to the equinox and ecliptic of date. For high-accuracy applications, free core nutation should be included as well as any other relevant corrections to the position of the CIP.

  3. The arguments xp and yp are the coordinates (in radians) of the Celestial Intermediate Pole with respect to the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003), measured along the meridians to 0 and 90 deg west respectively.

  4. The matrix rc2t transforms from celestial to terrestrial coordinates:

    [TRS] = RPOM * R_3(GST) * RBPN * [CRS] = rc2t * [CRS]

    where [CRS] is a vector in the Geocentric Celestial Reference System and [TRS] is a vector in the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003), RBPN is the bias-precession-nutation matrix, GST is the Greenwich (apparent) Sidereal Time and RPOM is the polar motion matrix.

  5. Although its name does not include "00", This function is in fact specific to the IAU 2000 models.

Called

  • pn00: bias/precession/nutation results, IAU 2000
  • gmst00: Greenwich mean sidereal time, IAU 2000
  • sp00: the TIO locator s', IERS 2000
  • ee00: equation of the equinoxes, IAU 2000
  • pom00: polar motion matrix
  • c2teqx: form equinox-based celestial-to-terrestrial matrix

Reference

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)
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ERFA.c2txyFunction
c2txy(tta, ttb, uta, utb, x, y, xp, yp)

Form the celestial to terrestrial matrix given the date, the UT1, the CIP coordinates and the polar motion. IAU 2000.

Given

  • tta, ttb: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)
  • uta, utb: UT1 as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)
  • x, y: Celestial Intermediate Pole (Note 2)
  • xp, yp: Coordinates of the pole (radians, Note 3)

Returned

  • rc2t: Celestial-to-terrestrial matrix (Note 4)

Notes

  1. The TT and UT1 dates tta+ttb and uta+utb are Julian Dates, apportioned in any convenient way between the arguments uta and utb. For example, JD(UT1)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any o these ways, among others:

    utautbMethod
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 and MJD methods are good compromises between resolution and convenience. In the case of uta,utb, the date & time method is best matched to the Earth rotation angle algorithm used: maximum precision is delivered when the uta argument is for 0hrs UT1 on the day in question and the utb argument lies in the range 0 to 1, or vice versa.

  2. The Celestial Intermediate Pole coordinates are the x,y components of the unit vector in the Geocentric Celestial Reference System.

  3. The arguments xp and yp are the coordinates (in radians) of the Celestial Intermediate Pole with respect to the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003), measured along the meridians to 0 and 90 deg west respectively.

  4. The matrix rc2t transforms from celestial to terrestrial coordinates:

    [TRS] = RPOM * R_3(ERA) * RC2I * [CRS] = rc2t * [CRS]

    where [CRS] is a vector in the Geocentric Celestial Reference System and [TRS] is a vector in the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003), ERA is the Earth Rotation Angle and RPOM is the polar motion matrix.

  5. Although its name does not include "00", This function is in fact specific to the IAU 2000 models.

Called

  • c2ixy: celestial-to-intermediate matrix, given X,Y
  • era00: Earth rotation angle, IAU 2000
  • sp00: the TIO locator s', IERS 2000
  • pom00: polar motion matrix
  • c2tcio: form CIO-based celestial-to-terrestrial matrix

Reference

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)
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ERFA.cal2jdMethod
cal2jd(iy, imo, id)

Gregorian Calendar to Julian Date.

Given

  • iy, im, id: Year, month, day in Gregorian calendar (Note 1)

Returned

  • djm0: MJD zero-point: always 2400000.5
  • djm: Modified Julian Date for 0 hrs

Notes

  1. The algorithm used is valid from -4800 March 1, but this implementation rejects dates before -4799 January 1.

  2. The Julian Date is returned in two pieces, in the usual ERFA manner, which is designed to preserve time resolution. The Julian Date is available as a single number by adding djm0 and djm.

  3. In early eras the conversion is from the "Proleptic Gregorian Calendar"; no account is taken of the date(s) of adoption of the Gregorian Calendar, nor is the AD/BC numbering convention observed.

Reference

  • Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, P. Kenneth Seidelmann (ed), University Science Books (1992), Section 12.92 (p604).
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ERFA.cpvFunction
cpv(pv)

Copy a position/velocity vector.

Deprecated

Use Base.deepcopy instead.

Given

  • pv: position/velocity vector to be copied

Returned

  • c: copy
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ERFA.crFunction
cr(p)

Copy an r-vector.

Deprecated

Use Base.copy instead.

Given

  • r: r-matrix to be copied

Returned

  • c: copy
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ERFA.d2dtfMethod
d2dtf(scale, ndp, d1, d2)

Format for output a 2-part Julian Date (or in the case of UTC a quasi-JD form that includes special provision for leap seconds).

Given

  • scale: Time scale ID (Note 1)
  • ndp: Resolution (Note 2)
  • d1, d2: Time as a 2-part Julian Date (Notes 3,4)

Returned

  • iy, im, id: Year, month, day in Gregorian calendar (Note 5)
  • ihmsf: Hours, minutes, seconds, fraction (Note 1)

Notes

  1. scale identifies the time scale. Only the value "UTC" (in upper case) is significant, and enables handling of leap seconds (see Note 4).

  2. ndp is the number of decimal places in the seconds field, and can have negative as well as positive values, such as:

    ndpresolution
    -41 00 00
    -30 10 00
    -20 01 00
    -10 00 10
    00 00 01
    10 00 00.1
    20 00 00.01
    30 00 00.001

    The limits are platform dependent, but a safe range is -5 to +9.

  3. d1+d2 is Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments, for example where d1 is the Julian Day Number and d2 is the fraction of a day. In the case of UTC, where the use of JD is problematical, special conventions apply: see the next note.

  4. JD cannot unambiguously represent UTC during a leap second unless special measures are taken. The ERFA internal convention is that the quasi-JD day represents UTC days whether the length is 86399, 86400 or 86401 SI seconds. In the 1960-1972 era there were smaller jumps (in either direction) each time the linear UTC(TAI) expression was changed, and these "mini-leaps" are also included in the ERFA convention.

  5. The warning status "dubious year" flags UTCs that predate the introduction of the time scale or that are too far in the future to be trusted. See dat for further details.

  6. For calendar conventions and limitations, see cal2jd.

Called

  • jd2cal: JD to Gregorian calendar
  • d2tf: decompose days to hms
  • dat: delta(AT) = TAI-UTC
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ERFA.d2tfMethod
d2tf(ndp, a)

Decompose days to hours, minutes, seconds, fraction.

Given

  • ndp: Resolution (Note 1)
  • days: Interval in days

Returned

  • sign: '+' or '-'
  • ihmsf: Hours, minutes, seconds, fraction

Notes

  1. The argument ndp is interpreted as follows:

    ndpresolution
    :...0000 00 00
    -71000 00 00
    -6100 00 00
    -510 00 00
    -41 00 00
    -30 10 00
    -20 01 00
    -10 00 10
    00 00 01
    10 00 00.1
    20 00 00.01
    30 00 00.001
    :0 00 00.000...
  2. The largest positive useful value for ndp is determined by the size of days, the format of double on the target platform, and the risk of overflowing ihmsf[3]. On a typical platform, for days up to 1.0, the available floating-point precision might correspond to ndp=12. However, the practical limit is typically ndp=9, set by the capacity of a 32-bit int, or ndp=4 if int is only 16 bits.

  3. The absolute value of days may exceed 1.0. In cases where it does not, it is up to the caller to test for and handle the case where days is very nearly 1.0 and rounds up to 24 hours, by testing for ihmsf[0]=24 and setting ihmsf[0-3] to zero.

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ERFA.datMethod
dat(iy, im, id, fd)

For a given UTC date, calculate delta(AT) = TAI-UTC.

IMPORTANT

A new version of this function must be produced whenever a new leap second is announced. There are four items to change on each such occasion:

  1. A new line must be added to the set of statements that initialize the array "changes".

  2. The constant IYV must be set to the current year.

  3. The "Latest leap second" comment below must be set to the new leap second date.

  4. The "This revision" comment, later, must be set to the current date.

Change (2) must also be carried out whenever the function is re-issued, even if no leap seconds have been added.

Latest leap second: 2016 December 31

Given

  • iy: UTC: year (Notes 1 and 2)
  • im: Month (Note 2)
  • id: Day (Notes 2 and 3)
  • fd: Fraction of day (Note 4)

Returned

  • deltat: TAI minus UTC, seconds

Notes

  1. UTC began at 1960 January 1.0 (JD 2436934.5) and it is improper to call the function with an earlier date. If this is attempted, zero is returned together with a warning status.

    Because leap seconds cannot, in principle, be predicted in advance, a reliable check for dates beyond the valid range is impossible. To guard against gross errors, a year five or more after the release year of the present function (see the constant IYV) is considered dubious. In this case a warning status is returned but the result is computed in the normal way.

    For both too-early and too-late years, the warning status is +1. This is distinct from the error status -1, which signifies a year so early that JD could not be computed.

  2. If the specified date is for a day which ends with a leap second, the TAI-UTC value returned is for the period leading up to the leap second. If the date is for a day which begins as a leap second ends, the TAI-UTC returned is for the period following the leap second.

  3. The day number must be in the normal calendar range, for example 1 through 30 for April. The "almanac" convention of allowing such dates as January 0 and December 32 is not supported in this function, in order to avoid confusion near leap seconds.

  4. The fraction of day is used only for dates before the introduction of leap seconds, the first of which occurred at the end of 1971. It is tested for validity (0 to 1 is the valid range) even if not used; if invalid, zero is used and status -4 is returned. For many applications, setting fd to zero is acceptable; the resulting error is always less than 3 ms (and occurs only pre-1972).

  5. The status value returned in the case where there are multiple errors refers to the first error detected. For example, if the month and day are 13 and 32 respectively, status -2 (bad month) will be returned. The "internal error" status refers to a case that is impossible but causes some compilers to issue a warning.

  6. In cases where a valid result is not available, zero is returned.

References

    1. For dates from 1961 January 1 onwards, the expressions from the

    file ftp://maia.usno.navy.mil/ser7/tai-utc.dat are used.

    1. The 5ms timestep at 1961 January 1 is taken from 2.58.1 (p87) of

    the 1992 Explanatory Supplement.

Called

  • cal2jd: Gregorian calendar to JD
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ERFA.dtdbMethod
dtdb(date1, date2, ut, elong, u, v)

An approximation to TDB-TT, the difference between barycentric dynamical time and terrestrial time, for an observer on the Earth.

The different time scales - proper, coordinate and realized - are related to each other:

          TAI             <-  physically realized
           :
        offset            <-  observed (nominally +32.184s)
           :
          TT              <-  terrestrial time
           :
  rate adjustment (L_G)   <-  definition of TT
           :
          TCG             <-  time scale for GCRS
           :
    "periodic" terms      <-  [`dtdb`](@ref)  is an implementation
           :
  rate adjustment (L_C)   <-  function of solar-system ephemeris
           :
          TCB             <-  time scale for BCRS
           :
  rate adjustment (-L_B)  <-  definition of TDB
           :
          TDB             <-  TCB scaled to track TT
           :
    "periodic" terms      <-  -eraDtdb is an approximation
           :
          TT              <-  terrestrial time

Adopted values for the various constants can be found in the IERS Conventions (McCarthy & Petit 2003).

Given

  • date1, date2: Date, TDB (Notes 1-3)
  • ut: Universal time (UT1, fraction of one day)
  • elong: Longitude (east positive, radians)
  • u: Distance from Earth spin axis (km)
  • v: Distance north of equatorial plane (km)

Returned

  • TDB-TT (seconds)

Notes

  1. The date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

    Although the date is, formally, barycentric dynamical time (TDB), the terrestrial dynamical time (TT) can be used with no practical effect on the accuracy of the prediction.

  2. TT can be regarded as a coordinate time that is realized as an offset of 32.184s from International Atomic Time, TAI. TT is a specific linear transformation of geocentric coordinate time TCG, which is the time scale for the Geocentric Celestial Reference System, GCRS.

  3. TDB is a coordinate time, and is a specific linear transformation of barycentric coordinate time TCB, which is the time scale for the Barycentric Celestial Reference System, BCRS.

  4. The difference TCG-TCB depends on the masses and positions of the bodies of the solar system and the velocity of the Earth. It is dominated by a rate difference, the residual being of a periodic character. The latter, which is modeled by the present function, comprises a main (annual) sinusoidal term of amplitude approximately 0.00166 seconds, plus planetary terms up to about 20 microseconds, and lunar and diurnal terms up to 2 microseconds. These effects come from the changing transverse Doppler effect and gravitational red-shift as the observer (on the Earth's surface) experiences variations in speed (with respect to the BCRS) and gravitational potential.

  5. TDB can be regarded as the same as TCB but with a rate adjustment to keep it close to TT, which is convenient for many applications. The history of successive attempts to define TDB is set out in Resolution 3 adopted by the IAU General Assembly in 2006, which defines a fixed TDB(TCB) transformation that is consistent with contemporary solar-system ephemerides. Future ephemerides will imply slightly changed transformations between TCG and TCB, which could introduce a linear drift between TDB and TT; however, any such drift is unlikely to exceed 1 nanosecond per century.

  6. The geocentric TDB-TT model used in the present function is that of Fairhead & Bretagnon (1990), in its full form. It was originally supplied by Fairhead (private communications with P.T.Wallace, 1990) as a Fortran subroutine. The present C function contains an adaptation of the Fairhead code. The numerical results are essentially unaffected by the changes, the differences with respect to the Fairhead & Bretagnon original being at the 1e-20 s level.

    The topocentric part of the model is from Moyer (1981) and Murray (1983), with fundamental arguments adapted from Simon et al. 1994. It is an approximation to the expression ( v / c ) . ( r / c ), where v is the barycentric velocity of the Earth, r is the geocentric position of the observer and c is the speed of light.

    By supplying zeroes for u and v, the topocentric part of the model can be nullified, and the function will return the Fairhead & Bretagnon result alone.

  7. During the interval 1950-2050, the absolute accuracy is better than +/- 3 nanoseconds relative to time ephemerides obtained by direct numerical integrations based on the JPL DE405 solar system ephemeris.

  8. It must be stressed that the present function is merely a model, and that numerical integration of solar-system ephemerides is the definitive method for predicting the relationship between TCG and TCB and hence between TT and TDB.

References

  • Fairhead, L., & Bretagnon, P., Astron.Astrophys., 229, 240-247 (1990).

  • IAU 2006 Resolution 3.

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

  • Moyer, T.D., Cel.Mech., 23, 33 (1981).

  • Murray, C.A., Vectorial Astrometry, Adam Hilger (1983).

  • Seidelmann, P.K. et al., Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, Chapter 2, University Science Books (1992).

  • Simon, J.L., Bretagnon, P., Chapront, J., Chapront-Touze, M., Francou, G. & Laskar, J., Astron.Astrophys., 282, 663-683 (1994).

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ERFA.dtf2dMethod
dtf2d(scale, iy, imo, id, ih, imi, sec)

Encode date and time fields into 2-part Julian Date (or in the case of UTC a quasi-JD form that includes special provision for leap seconds).

Given

  • scale: Time scale ID (Note 1)
  • iy, im, id: Year, month, day in Gregorian calendar (Note 2)
  • ihr, imn: Hour, minute
  • sec: Seconds

Returned

  • d1, d2: 2-part Julian Date (Notes 3,4)

Notes

  1. scale identifies the time scale. Only the value "UTC" (in upper case) is significant, and enables handling of leap seconds (see Note 4).

  2. For calendar conventions and limitations, see cal2jd.

  3. The sum of the results, d1+d2, is Julian Date, where normally d1 is the Julian Day Number and d2 is the fraction of a day. In the case of UTC, where the use of JD is problematical, special conventions apply: see the next note.

  4. JD cannot unambiguously represent UTC during a leap second unless special measures are taken. The ERFA internal convention is that the quasi-JD day represents UTC days whether the length is 86399, 86400 or 86401 SI seconds. In the 1960-1972 era there were smaller jumps (in either direction) each time the linear UTC(TAI) expression was changed, and these "mini-leaps" are also included in the ERFA convention.

  5. The warning status "time is after end of day" usually means that the sec argument is greater than 60.0. However, in a day ending in a leap second the limit changes to 61.0 (or 59.0 in the case of a negative leap second).

  6. The warning status "dubious year" flags UTCs that predate the introduction of the time scale or that are too far in the future to be trusted. See dat for further details.

  7. Only in the case of continuous and regular time scales (TAI, TT, TCG, TCB and TDB) is the result d1+d2 a Julian Date, strictly speaking. In the other cases (UT1 and UTC) the result must be used with circumspection; in particular the difference between two such results cannot be interpreted as a precise time interval.

Called

  • cal2jd: Gregorian calendar to JD
  • dat: delta(AT) = TAI-UTC
  • jd2cal: JD to Gregorian calendar
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ERFA.eceq06Function
eceq06(date1, date2, dl, db)

Transformation from ecliptic coordinates (mean equinox and ecliptic of date) to ICRS RA,Dec, using the IAU 2006 precession model.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian date (Note 1)
  • dl, db: Ecliptic longitude and latitude (radians)

Returned

  • dr, dd: ICRS right ascension and declination (radians)
  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. No assumptions are made about whether the coordinates represent starlight and embody astrometric effects such as parallax or aberration.

  3. The transformation is approximately that from ecliptic longitude and latitude (mean equinox and ecliptic of date) to mean J2000.0 right ascension and declination, with only frame bias (always less than 25 mas) to disturb this classical picture.

Called

  • s2c: spherical coordinates to unit vector
  • ecm06: J2000.0 to ecliptic rotation matrix, IAU 2006
  • trxp: product of transpose of r-matrix and p-vector
  • c2s: unit vector to spherical coordinates
  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi
  • anpm: normalize angle into range +/- pi
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ERFA.ecm06Method
ecm06(date1, date2)

ICRS equatorial to ecliptic rotation matrix, IAU 2006.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian date (Note 1)

Returned

  • rm: ICRS to ecliptic rotation matrix

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The matrix is in the sense

    E_ep = rm x P_ICRS,

    where P_ICRS is a vector with respect to ICRS right ascension and declination axes and E_ep is the same vector with respect to the (inertial) ecliptic and equinox of date.

  3. P_ICRS is a free vector, merely a direction, typically of unit magnitude, and not bound to any particular spatial origin, such as the Earth, Sun or SSB. No assumptions are made about whether it represents starlight and embodies astrometric effects such as parallax or aberration. The transformation is approximately that between mean J2000.0 right ascension and declination and ecliptic longitude and latitude, with only frame bias (always less than 25 mas) to disturb this classical picture.

Called

  • obl06: mean obliquity, IAU 2006
  • pmat06: PB matrix, IAU 2006
  • ir: initialize r-matrix to identity
  • rx: rotate around X-axis
  • rxr: product of two r-matrices
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ERFA.ee00Method
ee00(date1, date2, epsa, dpsi)

The equation of the equinoxes, compatible with IAU 2000 resolutions, given the nutation in longitude and the mean obliquity.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)
  • epsa: Mean obliquity (Note 2)
  • dpsi: Nutation in longitude (Note 3)

Returned

  • Equation of the equinoxes (Note 4)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The obliquity, in radians, is mean of date.

  3. The result, which is in radians, operates in the following sense:

    Greenwich apparent ST = GMST + equation of the equinoxes

  4. The result is compatible with the IAU 2000 resolutions. For further details, see IERS Conventions 2003 and Capitaine et al. (2002).

Called

  • eect00: equation of the equinoxes complementary terms

References

  • Capitaine, N., Wallace, P.T. and McCarthy, D.D., "Expressions to implement the IAU 2000 definition of UT1", Astronomy & Astrophysics, 406, 1135-1149 (2003)

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

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ERFA.ee00aFunction
ee00a(dj1, dj2)

Equation of the equinoxes, compatible with IAU 2000 resolutions.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • Equation of the equinoxes (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The result, which is in radians, operates in the following sense:

    Greenwich apparent ST = GMST + equation of the equinoxes

  3. The result is compatible with the IAU 2000 resolutions. For further details, see IERS Conventions 2003 and Capitaine et al. (2002).

Called

  • pr00: IAU 2000 precession adjustments
  • obl80: mean obliquity, IAU 1980
  • nut00a: nutation, IAU 2000A
  • ee00: equation of the equinoxes, IAU 2000

References

  • Capitaine, N., Wallace, P.T. and McCarthy, D.D., "Expressions to implement the IAU 2000 definition of UT1", Astronomy & Astrophysics, 406, 1135-1149 (2003).

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004).

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ERFA.ee00bFunction
ee00b(dj1, dj2)

Equation of the equinoxes, compatible with IAU 2000 resolutions but using the truncated nutation model IAU 2000B.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • Equation of the equinoxes (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The result, which is in radians, operates in the following sense:

    Greenwich apparent ST = GMST + equation of the equinoxes

  3. The result is compatible with the IAU 2000 resolutions except that accuracy has been compromised for the sake of speed. For further details, see McCarthy & Luzum (2001), IERS Conventions 2003 and Capitaine et al. (2003).

Called

  • pr00: IAU 2000 precession adjustments
  • obl80: mean obliquity, IAU 1980
  • nut00b: nutation, IAU 2000B
  • ee00: equation of the equinoxes, IAU 2000

References

  • Capitaine, N., Wallace, P.T. and McCarthy, D.D., "Expressions to implement the IAU 2000 definition of UT1", Astronomy & Astrophysics, 406, 1135-1149 (2003)

  • McCarthy, D.D. & Luzum, B.J., "An abridged model of the precession-nutation of the celestial pole", Celestial Mechanics & Dynamical Astronomy, 85, 37-49 (2003)

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

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ERFA.ee06aFunction
ee06a(dj1, dj2)

Equation of the equinoxes, compatible with IAU 2000 resolutions and IAU 2006/2000A precession-nutation.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • Equation of the equinoxes (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The result, which is in radians, operates in the following sense:

    Greenwich apparent ST = GMST + equation of the equinoxes

Called

  • anpm: normalize angle into range +/- pi
  • gst06a: Greenwich apparent sidereal time, IAU 2006/2000A
  • gmst06: Greenwich mean sidereal time, IAU 2006

Reference

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), 2004, IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG
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ERFA.eect00Function
eect00(date1, date2)

Equation of the equinoxes complementary terms, consistent with IAU 2000 resolutions.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • Complementary terms (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The "complementary terms" are part of the equation of the equinoxes (EE), classically the difference between apparent and mean Sidereal Time:

    GAST = GMST + EE

    with:

    EE = dpsi * cos(eps)

    where dpsi is the nutation in longitude and eps is the obliquity of date. However, if the rotation of the Earth were constant in an inertial frame the classical formulation would lead to apparent irregularities in the UT1 timescale traceable to side- effects of precession-nutation. In order to eliminate these effects from UT1, "complementary terms" were introduced in 1994 (IAU, 1994) and took effect from 1997 (Capitaine and Gontier, 1993):

    GAST = GMST + CT + EE

    By convention, the complementary terms are included as part of the equation of the equinoxes rather than as part of the mean Sidereal Time. This slightly compromises the "geometrical" interpretation of mean sidereal time but is otherwise inconsequential.

    The present function computes CT in the above expression, compatible with IAU 2000 resolutions (Capitaine et al., 2002, and IERS Conventions 2003).

Called

  • fal03: mean anomaly of the Moon
  • falp03: mean anomaly of the Sun
  • faf03: mean argument of the latitude of the Moon
  • fad03: mean elongation of the Moon from the Sun
  • faom03: mean longitude of the Moon's ascending node
  • fave03: mean longitude of Venus
  • fae03: mean longitude of Earth
  • fapa03: general accumulated precession in longitude

References

  • Capitaine, N. & Gontier, A.-M., Astron. Astrophys., 275, 645-650 (1993)

  • Capitaine, N., Wallace, P.T. and McCarthy, D.D., "Expressions to implement the IAU 2000 definition of UT1", Astronomy & Astrophysics, 406, 1135-1149 (2003)

  • IAU Resolution C7, Recommendation 3 (1994)

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

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ERFA.eformMethod
eform(n::Ellipsoid)

Earth reference ellipsoids.

Given

  • n: Ellipsoid identifier (Note 1)

Returned

  • a: Equatorial radius (meters, Note 2)
  • f: Flattening (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The identifier n is a number that specifies the choice of reference ellipsoid. The following are supported:

  2. The ellipsoid parameters are returned in the form of equatorial radius in meters (a) and flattening (f). The latter is a number around 0.00335, i.e. around 1/298.

  3. For the case where an unsupported n value is supplied, zero a and f are returned, as well as error status.

References

  • Department of Defense World Geodetic System 1984, National Imagery and Mapping Agency Technical Report 8350.2, Third Edition, p3-2.

  • Moritz, H., Bull. Geodesique 66-2, 187 (1992).

  • The Department of Defense World Geodetic System 1972, World Geodetic System Committee, May 1974.

  • Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, P. Kenneth Seidelmann (ed), University Science Books (1992), p220.

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ERFA.eo06aFunction
eo06a(date1, date2)

Equation of the origins, IAU 2006 precession and IAU 2000A nutation.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • Equation of the origins in radians

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The equation of the origins is the distance between the true equinox and the celestial intermediate origin and, equivalently, the difference between Earth rotation angle and Greenwich apparent sidereal time (ERA-GST). It comprises the precession (since J2000.0) in right ascension plus the equation of the equinoxes (including the small correction terms).

Called

  • pnm06a: classical NPB matrix, IAU 2006/2000A
  • bpn2xy: extract CIP X,Y coordinates from NPB matrix
  • s06: the CIO locator s, given X,Y, IAU 2006
  • eors: equation of the origins, given NPB matrix and s

References

  • Capitaine, N. & Wallace, P.T., 2006, Astron.Astrophys. 450, 855

  • Wallace, P.T. & Capitaine, N., 2006, Astron.Astrophys. 459, 981

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ERFA.eorsMethod
eors(rnpb, s)

Equation of the origins, given the classical NPB matrix and the quantity s.

Given

  • rnpb: Classical nutation x precession x bias matrix
  • s: The quantity s (the CIO locator)

Returned

  • The equation of the origins in radians.

Notes

  1. The equation of the origins is the distance between the true equinox and the celestial intermediate origin and, equivalently, the difference between Earth rotation angle and Greenwich apparent sidereal time (ERA-GST). It comprises the precession (since J2000.0) in right ascension plus the equation of the equinoxes (including the small correction terms).

  2. The algorithm is from Wallace & Capitaine (2006).

References

  • Capitaine, N. & Wallace, P.T., 2006, Astron.Astrophys. 450, 855

  • Wallace, P. & Capitaine, N., 2006, Astron.Astrophys. 459, 981

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ERFA.epbFunction
epb(dj1, dj2)

Julian Date to Besselian Epoch.

Given

  • dj1, dj2: Julian Date (see note)

Returned

  • Besselian Epoch.

Note

The Julian Date is supplied in two pieces, in the usual ERFA manner, which is designed to preserve time resolution. The Julian Date is available as a single number by adding dj1 and dj2. The maximum resolution is achieved if dj1 is 2451545.0 (J2000.0).

Reference

  • Lieske, J.H., 1979. Astron.Astrophys., 73, 282.
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ERFA.epb2jdFunction
epb2jd(epj)

Besselian Epoch to Julian Date.

Given

  • epb: Besselian Epoch (e.g. 1957.3)

Returned

  • djm0: MJD zero-point: always 2400000.5
  • djm: Modified Julian Date

Note

The Julian Date is returned in two pieces, in the usual ERFA manner, which is designed to preserve time resolution. The Julian Date is available as a single number by adding djm0 and djm.

Reference

  • Lieske, J.H., 1979, Astron.Astrophys. 73, 282.
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ERFA.epjFunction
epj(dj1, dj2)

Julian Date to Julian Epoch.

Given

  • dj1, dj2: Julian Date (see note)

Returned

  • Julian Epoch

Note

The Julian Date is supplied in two pieces, in the usual ERFA manner, which is designed to preserve time resolution. The Julian Date is available as a single number by adding dj1 and dj2. The maximum resolution is achieved if dj1 is 2451545.0 (J2000.0).

Reference

  • Lieske, J.H., 1979, Astron.Astrophys. 73, 282.
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ERFA.epj2jdFunction
epj2jd(epj)

Julian Epoch to Julian Date.

Given

  • epj: Julian Epoch (e.g. 1996.8)

Returned

  • djm0: MJD zero-point: always 2400000.5
  • djm: Modified Julian Date

Note

The Julian Date is returned in two pieces, in the usual ERFA manner, which is designed to preserve time resolution. The Julian Date is available as a single number by adding djm0 and djm.

Reference

  • Lieske, J.H., 1979, Astron.Astrophys. 73, 282.
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ERFA.epv00Method
epv00(date1, date2)

Earth position and velocity, heliocentric and barycentric, with respect to the Barycentric Celestial Reference System.

Given

  • date1, date2: TDB date (Note 1)

Returned

  • pvh: Heliocentric Earth position/velocity
  • pvb: Barycentric Earth position/velocity

Notes

  1. The TDB date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TDB)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience. However, the accuracy of the result is more likely to be limited by the algorithm itself than the way the date has been expressed.

    n.b. TT can be used instead of TDB in most applications.

  2. On return, the arrays pvh and pvb contain the following:

    pvh[0][0]  x       }
    pvh[0][1]  y       } heliocentric position, au
    pvh[0][2]  z       }
    
    pvh[1][0]  xdot    }
    pvh[1][1]  ydot    } heliocentric velocity, au/d
    pvh[1][2]  zdot    }
    
    pvb[0][0]  x       }
    pvb[0][1]  y       } barycentric position, au
    pvb[0][2]  z       }
    
    pvb[1][0]  xdot    }
    pvb[1][1]  ydot    } barycentric velocity, au/d
    pvb[1][2]  zdot    }

    The vectors are with respect to the Barycentric Celestial Reference System. The time unit is one day in TDB.

  3. The function is a SIMPLIFIED SOLUTION from the planetary theory VSOP2000 (X. Moisson, P. Bretagnon, 2001, Celes. Mechanics & Dyn. Astron., 80, 3/4, 205-213) and is an adaptation of original Fortran code supplied by P. Bretagnon (private comm., 2000).

  4. Comparisons over the time span 1900-2100 with this simplified solution and the JPL DE405 ephemeris give the following results:

                          RMS    max
    Heliocentric:
        position error    3.7   11.2   km
        velocity error    1.4    5.0   mm/s
    
    Barycentric:
        position error    4.6   13.4   km
        velocity error    1.4    4.9   mm/s

    Comparisons with the JPL DE406 ephemeris show that by 1800 and 2200 the position errors are approximately double their 1900-2100 size. By 1500 and 2500 the deterioration is a factor of 10 and by 1000 and 3000 a factor of 60. The velocity accuracy falls off at about half that rate.

  5. It is permissible to use the same array for pvh and pvb, which will receive the barycentric values.

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ERFA.eqec06Function
eqec06(date1, date2, dr, dd)

Transformation from ICRS equatorial coordinates to ecliptic coordinates (mean equinox and ecliptic of date) using IAU 2006 precession model.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian date (Note 1)
  • dr, dd: ICRS right ascension and declination (radians)

Returned

  • dl, db: Ecliptic longitude and latitude (radians)
  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. No assumptions are made about whether the coordinates represent starlight and embody astrometric effects such as parallax or aberration.

  3. The transformation is approximately that from mean J2000.0 right ascension and declination to ecliptic longitude and latitude (mean equinox and ecliptic of date), with only frame bias (always less than 25 mas) to disturb this classical picture.

Called

  • s2c: spherical coordinates to unit vector
  • ecm06: J2000.0 to ecliptic rotation matrix, IAU 2006
  • rxp: product of r-matrix and p-vector
  • c2s: unit vector to spherical coordinates
  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi
  • anpm: normalize angle into range +/- pi
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ERFA.eqeq94Function
eqeq94(date1, date2)

Equation of the equinoxes, IAU 1994 model.

Given

  • date1, date2: TDB date (Note 1)

Returned

  • Equation of the equinoxes (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The result, which is in radians, operates in the following sense:

    Greenwich apparent ST = GMST + equation of the equinoxes

Called

  • anpm: normalize angle into range +/- pi
  • nut80: nutation, IAU 1980
  • obl80: mean obliquity, IAU 1980

References

  • IAU Resolution C7, Recommendation 3 (1994).

  • Capitaine, N. & Gontier, A.-M., 1993, Astron. Astrophys., 275, 645-650.

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ERFA.era00Function
era00(dj1, dj2)

Earth rotation angle (IAU 2000 model).

Given

  • dj1, dj2: UT1 as a 2-part Julian Date (see note)

Returned

  • Earth rotation angle (radians), range 0-2pi

Notes

  1. The UT1 date dj1+dj2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the arguments dj1 and dj2. For example, JD(UT1)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    dj1dj2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 and MJD methods are good compromises between resolution and convenience. The date & time method is best matched to the algorithm used: maximum precision is delivered when the dj1 argument is for 0hrs UT1 on the day in question and the dj2 argument lies in the range 0 to 1, or vice versa.

  2. The algorithm is adapted from Expression 22 of Capitaine et al. 2000. The time argument has been expressed in days directly, and, to retain precision, integer contributions have been eliminated. The same formulation is given in IERS Conventions (2003), Chap. 5, Eq. 14.

Called

  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi

References

  • Capitaine N., Guinot B. and McCarthy D.D, 2000, Astron. Astrophys., 355, 398-405.

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

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ERFA.erfa_cpFunction
erfa_cp(p)

Copy a p-vector.

Deprecated

Use Base.copy instead.

Given

  • p: p-vector to be copied

Returned

  • c: copy
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ERFA.fad03Function
fad03(t)

Fundamental argument, IERS Conventions (2003):

mean elongation of the Moon from the Sun.

Given

  • t: TDB, Julian centuries since J2000.0 (Note 1)

Returned

  • D, radians (Note 2)

Notes

  1. Though t is strictly TDB, it is usually more convenient to use TT, which makes no significant difference.

  2. The expression used is as adopted in IERS Conventions (2003) and is from Simon et al. (1994).

References

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

  • Simon, J.-L., Bretagnon, P., Chapront, J., Chapront-Touze, M., Francou, G., Laskar, J. 1994, Astron.Astrophys. 282, 663-683

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ERFA.fae03Function
fae03(t)

Fundamental argument, IERS Conventions (2003): Mean longitude of Earth.

Given

  • t: TDB, Julian centuries since J2000.0 (Note 1)

Returned

  • Mean longitude of Earth, radians (Note 2)

Notes

  1. Though t is strictly TDB, it is usually more convenient to use TT, which makes no significant difference.

  2. The expression used is as adopted in IERS Conventions (2003) and comes from Souchay et al. (1999) after Simon et al. (1994).

References

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

  • Simon, J.-L., Bretagnon, P., Chapront, J., Chapront-Touze, M., Francou, G., Laskar, J. 1994, Astron.Astrophys. 282, 663-683

  • Souchay, J., Loysel, B., Kinoshita, H., Folgueira, M. 1999, Astron.Astrophys.Supp.Ser. 135, 111

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ERFA.faf03Function
faf03(t)

Fundamental argument, IERS Conventions (2003): Mean longitude of the Moon minus mean longitude of the ascending node.

Given

  • t: TDB, Julian centuries since J2000.0 (Note 1)

Returned

  • F, radians (Note 2)

Notes

  1. Though t is strictly TDB, it is usually more convenient to use TT, which makes no significant difference.

  2. The expression used is as adopted in IERS Conventions (2003) and is from Simon et al. (1994).

References

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

  • Simon, J.-L., Bretagnon, P., Chapront, J., Chapront-Touze, M., Francou, G., Laskar, J. 1994, Astron.Astrophys. 282, 663-683

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ERFA.faju03Function
faju03(t)

Fundamental argument, IERS Conventions (2003): Mean longitude of Jupiter.

Given

  • t: TDB, Julian centuries since J2000.0 (Note 1)

Returned

  • Mean longitude of Jupiter, radians (Note 2)

Notes

  1. Though t is strictly TDB, it is usually more convenient to use TT, which makes no significant difference.

  2. The expression used is as adopted in IERS Conventions (2003) and comes from Souchay et al. (1999) after Simon et al. (1994).

References

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

  • Simon, J.-L., Bretagnon, P., Chapront, J., Chapront-Touze, M., Francou, G., Laskar, J. 1994, Astron.Astrophys. 282, 663-683

  • Souchay, J., Loysel, B., Kinoshita, H., Folgueira, M. 1999, Astron.Astrophys.Supp.Ser. 135, 111

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ERFA.fal03Function
fal03(t)

Fundamental argument, IERS Conventions (2003):

mean anomaly of the Moon.

Given

  • t: TDB, Julian centuries since J2000.0 (Note 1)

Returned

  • l, radians (Note 2)

Notes

  1. Though t is strictly TDB, it is usually more convenient to use TT, which makes no significant difference.

  2. The expression used is as adopted in IERS Conventions (2003) and is from Simon et al. (1994).

References

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

  • Simon, J.-L., Bretagnon, P., Chapront, J., Chapront-Touze, M., Francou, G., Laskar, J. 1994, Astron.Astrophys. 282, 663-683

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ERFA.falp03Function
falp03(t)

Fundamental argument, IERS Conventions (2003):

mean anomaly of the Sun.

Given

  • t: TDB, Julian centuries since J2000.0 (Note 1)

Returned

  • l', radians (Note 2)

Notes

  1. Though t is strictly TDB, it is usually more convenient to use TT, which makes no significant difference.

  2. The expression used is as adopted in IERS Conventions (2003) and is from Simon et al. (1994).

References

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

  • Simon, J.-L., Bretagnon, P., Chapront, J., Chapront-Touze, M., Francou, G., Laskar, J. 1994, Astron.Astrophys. 282, 663-683

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ERFA.fama03Function
fama03(t)

Fundamental argument, IERS Conventions (2003): Mean longitude of Mars.

Given

  • t: TDB, Julian centuries since J2000.0 (Note 1)

Returned

  • Mean longitude of Mars, radians (Note 2)

Notes

  1. Though t is strictly TDB, it is usually more convenient to use TT, which makes no significant difference.

  2. The expression used is as adopted in IERS Conventions (2003) and comes from Souchay et al. (1999) after Simon et al. (1994).

References

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

  • Simon, J.-L., Bretagnon, P., Chapront, J., Chapront-Touze, M., Francou, G., Laskar, J. 1994, Astron.Astrophys. 282, 663-683

  • Souchay, J., Loysel, B., Kinoshita, H., Folgueira, M. 1999, Astron.Astrophys.Supp.Ser. 135, 111

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ERFA.fame03Function
fame03(t)

Fundamental argument, IERS Conventions (2003): Mean longitude of Mercury.

Given

  • t: TDB, Julian centuries since J2000.0 (Note 1)

Returned

  • Mean longitude of Mercury, radians (Note 2)

Notes

  1. Though t is strictly TDB, it is usually more convenient to use TT, which makes no significant difference.

  2. The expression used is as adopted in IERS Conventions (2003) and comes from Souchay et al. (1999) after Simon et al. (1994).

References

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

  • Simon, J.-L., Bretagnon, P., Chapront, J., Chapront-Touze, M., Francou, G., Laskar, J. 1994, Astron.Astrophys. 282, 663-683

  • Souchay, J., Loysel, B., Kinoshita, H., Folgueira, M. 1999, Astron.Astrophys.Supp.Ser. 135, 111

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ERFA.fane03Function
fane03(t)

Fundamental argument, IERS Conventions (2003): Mean longitude of Neptune.

Given

  • t: TDB, Julian centuries since J2000.0 (Note 1)

Returned

  • Mean longitude of Neptune, radians (Note 2)

Notes

  1. Though t is strictly TDB, it is usually more convenient to use TT, which makes no significant difference.

  2. The expression used is as adopted in IERS Conventions (2003) and is adapted from Simon et al. (1994).

References

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

  • Simon, J.-L., Bretagnon, P., Chapront, J., Chapront-Touze, M., Francou, G., Laskar, J. 1994, Astron.Astrophys. 282, 663-683

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ERFA.faom03Function
faom03(t)

Fundamental argument, IERS Conventions (2003): Mean longitude of the Moon's ascending node.

Given

  • t: TDB, Julian centuries since J2000.0 (Note 1)

Returned

  • Omega, radians (Note 2)

Notes

  1. Though t is strictly TDB, it is usually more convenient to use TT, which makes no significant difference.

  2. The expression used is as adopted in IERS Conventions (2003) and is from Simon et al. (1994).

References

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

  • Simon, J.-L., Bretagnon, P., Chapront, J., Chapront-Touze, M., Francou, G., Laskar, J. 1994, Astron.Astrophys. 282, 663-683

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ERFA.fapa03Function
fapa03(t)

Fundamental argument, IERS Conventions (2003):

general accumulated precession in longitude.

Given

  • t: TDB, Julian centuries since J2000.0 (Note 1)

Returned

  • General precession in longitude, radians (Note 2)

Notes

  1. Though t is strictly TDB, it is usually more convenient to use TT, which makes no significant difference.

  2. The expression used is as adopted in IERS Conventions (2003). It is taken from Kinoshita & Souchay (1990) and comes originally from Lieske et al. (1977).

References

  • Kinoshita, H. and Souchay J. 1990, Celest.Mech. and Dyn.Astron. 48, 187

  • Lieske, J.H., Lederle, T., Fricke, W. & Morando, B. 1977, Astron.Astrophys. 58, 1-16

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

source
ERFA.fasa03Function
fasa03(t)

Fundamental argument, IERS Conventions (2003): Mean longitude of Saturn.

Given

  • t: TDB, Julian centuries since J2000.0 (Note 1)

Returned

  • Mean longitude of Saturn, radians (Note 2)

Notes

  1. Though t is strictly TDB, it is usually more convenient to use TT, which makes no significant difference.

  2. The expression used is as adopted in IERS Conventions (2003) and comes from Souchay et al. (1999) after Simon et al. (1994).

References

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

  • Simon, J.-L., Bretagnon, P., Chapront, J., Chapront-Touze, M., Francou, G., Laskar, J. 1994, Astron.Astrophys. 282, 663-683

  • Souchay, J., Loysel, B., Kinoshita, H., Folgueira, M. 1999, Astron.Astrophys.Supp.Ser. 135, 111

source
ERFA.faur03Function
faur03(t)

Fundamental argument, IERS Conventions (2003): Mean longitude of Uranus.

Given

  • t: TDB, Julian centuries since J2000.0 (Note 1)

Returned

  • Mean longitude of Uranus, radians (Note 2)

Notes

  1. Though t is strictly TDB, it is usually more convenient to use TT, which makes no significant difference.

  2. The expression used is as adopted in IERS Conventions (2003) and is adapted from Simon et al. (1994).

References

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

  • Simon, J.-L., Bretagnon, P., Chapront, J., Chapront-Touze, M., Francou, G., Laskar, J. 1994, Astron.Astrophys. 282, 663-683

source
ERFA.fave03Function
fave03(t)

Fundamental argument, IERS Conventions (2003): Mean longitude of Venus.

Given

  • t: TDB, Julian centuries since J2000.0 (Note 1)

Returned

  • Mean longitude of Venus, radians (Note 2)

Notes

  1. Though t is strictly TDB, it is usually more convenient to use TT, which makes no significant difference.

  2. The expression used is as adopted in IERS Conventions (2003) and comes from Souchay et al. (1999) after Simon et al. (1994).

References

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

  • Simon, J.-L., Bretagnon, P., Chapront, J., Chapront-Touze, M., Francou, G., Laskar, J. 1994, Astron.Astrophys. 282, 663-683

  • Souchay, J., Loysel, B., Kinoshita, H., Folgueira, M. 1999, Astron.Astrophys.Supp.Ser. 135, 111

source
ERFA.fk425Method
fk425(r1950, d1950, dr1950, dd1950, p1950, v1950)

Convert B1950.0 FK4 star catalog data to J2000.0 FK5.

This function converts a star's catalog data from the old FK4 Bessel-Newcomb) system to the later IAU 1976 FK5 (Fricke) system.

Given (all B1950.0, FK4)

  • r1950,d1950: B1950.0 RA,Dec (rad)
  • dr1950,dd1950: B1950.0 proper motions (rad/trop.yr)
  • p1950: Parallax (arcsec)
  • v1950: Radial velocity (km/s, +ve = moving away)

Returned (all J2000.0, FK5)

  • r2000,d2000: J2000.0 RA,Dec (rad)
  • dr2000,dd2000: J2000.0 proper motions (rad/Jul.yr)
  • p2000: Parallax (arcsec)
  • v2000: Radial velocity (km/s, +ve = moving away)

Notes

  1. The proper motions in RA are dRA/dt rather than cos(Dec)*dRA/dt, and are per year rather than per century.

  2. The conversion is somewhat complicated, for several reasons:

    • Change of standard epoch from B1950.0 to J2000.0.

    • An intermediate transition date of 1984 January 1.0 TT.

    • A change of precession model.

    • Change of time unit for proper motion (tropical to Julian).

    • FK4 positions include the E-terms of aberration, to simplify the hand computation of annual aberration. FK5 positions assume a rigorous aberration computation based on the Earth's barycentric velocity.

    • The E-terms also affect proper motions, and in particular cause objects at large distances to exhibit fictitious proper motions.

    The algorithm is based on Smith et al. (1989) and Yallop et al. (1989), which presented a matrix method due to Standish (1982) as developed by Aoki et al. (1983), using Kinoshita's development of Andoyer's post-Newcomb precession. The numerical constants from Seidelmann (1992) are used canonically.

  3. Conversion from B1950.0 FK4 to J2000.0 FK5 only is provided for. Conversions for different epochs and equinoxes would require additional treatment for precession, proper motion and E-terms.

  4. In the FK4 catalog the proper motions of stars within 10 degrees of the poles do not embody differential E-terms effects and should, strictly speaking, be handled in a different manner from stars outside these regions. However, given the general lack of homogeneity of the star data available for routine astrometry, the difficulties of handling positions that may have been determined from astrometric fields spanning the polar and non- polar regions, the likelihood that the differential E-terms effect was not taken into account when allowing for proper motion in past astrometry, and the undesirability of a discontinuity in the algorithm, the decision has been made in this ERFA algorithm to include the effects of differential E-terms on the proper motions for all stars, whether polar or not. At epoch J2000.0, and measuring "on the sky" rather than in terms of RA change, the errors resulting from this simplification are less than 1 milliarcsecond in position and 1 milliarcsecond per century in proper motion.

Called

  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi
  • pv2s: pv-vector to spherical coordinates
  • pdp: scalar product of two p-vectors
  • pvmpv: pv-vector minus pv_vector
  • pvppv: pv-vector plus pv_vector
  • s2pv: spherical coordinates to pv-vector
  • sxp: multiply p-vector by scalar

References

  • Aoki, S. et al., 1983, "Conversion matrix of epoch B1950.0 FK4-based positions of stars to epoch J2000.0 positions in accordance with the new IAU resolutions". Astron.Astrophys. 128, 263-267.

  • Seidelmann, P.K. (ed), 1992, "Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac", ISBN 0-935702-68-7.

  • Smith, C.A. et al., 1989, "The transformation of astrometric catalog systems to the equinox J2000.0". Astron.J. 97, 265.

  • Standish, E.M., 1982, "Conversion of positions and proper motions from B1950.0 to the IAU system at J2000.0". Astron.Astrophys., 115, 1, 20-22.

  • Yallop, B.D. et al., 1989, "Transformation of mean star places from FK4 B1950.0 to FK5 J2000.0 using matrices in 6-space". Astron.J. 97, 274.

source
ERFA.fk45zMethod
fk45z(r1950, d1950, bepoch)

Convert a B1950.0 FK4 star position to J2000.0 FK5, assuming zero proper motion in the FK5 system.

This function converts a star's catalog data from the old FK4 (Bessel-Newcomb) system to the later IAU 1976 FK5 (Fricke) system, in such a way that the FK5 proper motion is zero. Because such a star has, in general, a non-zero proper motion in the FK4 system, the function requires the epoch at which the position in the FK4 system was determined.

Given

  • r1950, d1950: B1950.0 FK4 RA,Dec at epoch (rad)
  • bepoch: Besselian epoch (e.g. 1979.3)

Returned

  • r2000, d2000: J2000.0 FK5 RA,Dec (rad)

Notes

  1. The epoch bepoch is strictly speaking Beselian, but if a Julian epoch is supplied the result will be affected only to a negligible extent.

  2. The method is from Appendix 2 of Aoki et al. (1983), but using the constants of Seidelmann (1992). See the function eraFk425 for a general introduction to the FK4 to FK5 conversion.

  3. Conversion from equinox B1950.0 FK4 to equinox J2000.0 FK5 only is provided for. Conversions for different starting and/or ending epochs would require additional treatment for precession, proper motion and E-terms.

  4. In the FK4 catalog the proper motions of stars within 10 degrees of the poles do not embody differential E-terms effects and should, strictly speaking, be handled in a different manner from stars outside these regions. However, given the general lack of homogeneity of the star data available for routine astrometry, the difficulties of handling positions that may have been determined from astrometric fields spanning the polar and non- polar regions, the likelihood that the differential E-terms effect was not taken into account when allowing for proper motion in past astrometry, and the undesirability of a discontinuity in the algorithm, the decision has been made in this ERFA algorithm to include the effects of differential E-terms on the proper motions for all stars, whether polar or not. At epoch 2000.0, and measuring "on the sky" rather than in terms of RA change, the errors resulting from this simplification are less than 1 milliarcsecond in position and 1 milliarcsecond per century in proper motion.

References

  • Aoki, S. et al., 1983, "Conversion matrix of epoch B1950.0 FK4-based positions of stars to epoch J2000.0 positions in accordance with the new IAU resolutions". Astron.Astrophys. 128, 263-267.

  • Seidelmann, P.K. (ed), 1992, "Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac", ISBN 0-935702-68-7.

Called

  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi
  • c2s: p-vector to spherical
  • epb2jd: Besselian epoch to Julian date
  • epj: Julian date to Julian epoch
  • pdp: scalar product of two p-vectors
  • pmp: p-vector minus p-vector
  • ppsp: p-vector plus scaled p-vector
  • pvu: update a pv-vector
  • s2c: spherical to p-vectors
source
ERFA.fk524Method
function fk524(r2000, d2000, dr2000, dd2000, p2000, v2000)

Convert J2000.0 FK5 star catalog data to B1950.0 FK4.

Given (all J2000.0, FK5)

  • r2000, d2000: J2000.0 RA,Dec (rad)
  • dr2000, dd2000: J2000.0 proper motions (rad/Jul.yr)
  • p2000: parallax (arcsec)
  • v2000: radial velocity (km/s, +ve = moving away)

Returned (all B1950.0, FK4)

  • r1950, d1950: B1950.0 RA,Dec (rad)
  • dr1950, dd1950: B1950.0 proper motions (rad/trop.yr)
  • p1950: parallax (arcsec)
  • v1950: radial velocity (km/s, +ve = moving away)

Notes

  1. The proper motions in RA are dRA/dt rather than cos(Dec)*dRA/dt, and are per year rather than per century.

  2. The conversion is somewhat complicated, for several reasons:

    • Change of standard epoch from J2000.0 to B1950.0.

    • An intermediate transition date of 1984 January 1.0 TT.

    • A change of precession model.

    • Change of time unit for proper motion (Julian to tropical).

    • FK4 positions include the E-terms of aberration, to simplify the hand computation of annual aberration. FK5 positions assume a rigorous aberration computation based on the Earth's barycentric velocity.

    • The E-terms also affect proper motions, and in particular cause objects at large distances to exhibit fictitious proper motions.

    The algorithm is based on Smith et al. (1989) and Yallop et al. (1989), which presented a matrix method due to Standish (1982) as developed by Aoki et al. (1983), using Kinoshita's development of Andoyer's post-Newcomb precession. The numerical constants from Seidelmann (1992) are used canonically.

  3. In the FK4 catalog the proper motions of stars within 10 degrees of the poles do not embody differential E-terms effects and should, strictly speaking, be handled in a different manner from stars outside these regions. However, given the general lack of homogeneity of the star data available for routine astrometry, the difficulties of handling positions that may have been determined from astrometric fields spanning the polar and non- polar regions, the likelihood that the differential E-terms effect was not taken into account when allowing for proper motion in past astrometry, and the undesirability of a discontinuity in the algorithm, the decision has been made in this ERFA algorithm to include the effects of differential E-terms on the proper motions for all stars, whether polar or not. At epoch J2000.0, and measuring "on the sky" rather than in terms of RA change, the errors resulting from this simplification are less than 1 milliarcsecond in position and 1 milliarcsecond per century in proper motion.

Called

  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi
  • pdp: scalar product of two p-vectors
  • pm: modulus of p-vector
  • pmp: p-vector minus p-vector
  • ppp: p-vector plus p-vector
  • pv2s: pv-vector to spherical coordinates
  • s2pv: spherical coordinates to pv-vector
  • sxp: multiply p-vector by scalar

References

  • Aoki, S. et al., 1983, "Conversion matrix of epoch B1950.0 FK4-based positions of stars to epoch J2000.0 positions in accordance with the new IAU resolutions". Astron.Astrophys. 128, 263-267.

  • Seidelmann, P.K. (ed), 1992, "Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac", ISBN 0-935702-68-7.

  • Smith, C.A. et al., 1989, "The transformation of astrometric catalog systems to the equinox J2000.0". Astron.J. 97, 265.

  • Standish, E.M., 1982, "Conversion of positions and proper motions from B1950.0 to the IAU system at J2000.0". Astron.Astrophys., 115, 1, 20-22.

  • Yallop, B.D. et al., 1989, "Transformation of mean star places from FK4 B1950.0 to FK5 J2000.0 using matrices in 6-space". Astron.J. 97, 274.

source
ERFA.fk52hMethod
fk52h(ra, dec, dra, ddec, px, rv)

Transform FK5 (J2000.0) star data into the Hipparcos system.

Given (all FK5, equinox J2000.0, epoch J2000.0)

  • r5: RA (radians)
  • d5: Dec (radians)
  • dr5: Proper motion in RA (dRA/dt, rad/Jyear)
  • dd5: Proper motion in Dec (dDec/dt, rad/Jyear)
  • px5: Parallax (arcsec)
  • rv5: Radial velocity (km/s, positive = receding)

Returned (all Hipparcos, epoch J2000.0)

  • rh: RA (radians)
  • dh: Dec (radians)
  • drh: proper motion in RA (dRA/dt, rad/Jyear)
  • ddh: proper motion in Dec (dDec/dt, rad/Jyear)
  • pxh: parallax (arcsec)
  • rvh: radial velocity (km/s, positive = receding)

Notes

  1. This function transforms FK5 star positions and proper motions into the system of the Hipparcos catalog.

  2. The proper motions in RA are dRA/dt rather than cos(Dec)*dRA/dt, and are per year rather than per century.

  3. The FK5 to Hipparcos transformation is modeled as a pure rotation and spin; zonal errors in the FK5 catalog are not taken into account.

  4. See also h2fk5, fk5hz, hfk5z.

Called

  • starpv: star catalog data to space motion pv-vector
  • fk5hip: FK5 to Hipparcos rotation and spin
  • rxp: product of r-matrix and p-vector
  • pxp: vector product of two p-vectors
  • ppp: p-vector plus p-vector
  • pvstar: space motion pv-vector to star catalog data

Reference

  • F.Mignard & M.Froeschle, Astron. Astrophys. 354, 732-739 (2000).
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ERFA.fk54zMethod
fk54z(r2000, d2000, bepoch)

Convert a J2000.0 FK5 star position to B1950.0 FK4, assuming zero proper motion in FK5 and parallax.

Given

  • r2000, d2000: J2000.0 FK5 RA,Dec (rad)
  • bepoch: Besselian epoch (e.g. 1950.0)

Returned

  • r1950, d1950: B1950.0 FK4 RA,Dec (rad) at epoch BEPOCH
  • dr1950, dd1950: B1950.0 FK4 proper motions (rad/trop.yr)

Notes

  1. In contrast to the eraFk524 function, here the FK5 proper motions, the parallax and the radial velocity are presumed zero.

  2. This function converts a star position from the IAU 1976 FK5 (Fricke) system to the former FK4 (Bessel-Newcomb) system, for cases such as distant radio sources where it is presumed there is zero parallax and no proper motion. Because of the E-terms of aberration, such objects have (in general) non-zero proper motion in FK4, and the present function returns those fictitious proper motions.

  3. Conversion from B1950.0 FK4 to J2000.0 FK5 only is provided for. Conversions involving other equinoxes would require additional treatment for precession.

  4. The position returned by this function is in the B1950.0 FK4 reference system but at Besselian epoch BEPOCH. For comparison with catalogs the BEPOCH argument will frequently be 1950.0. (In this context the distinction between Besselian and Julian epoch is insignificant.)

  5. The RA component of the returned (fictitious) proper motion is dRA/dt rather than cos(Dec)*dRA/dt.

Called

  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi
  • c2s: p-vector to spherical
  • fk524: FK4 to FK5
  • s2c: spherical to p-vector
source
ERFA.fk5hipMethod
fk5hip()

FK5 to Hipparcos rotation and spin.

Returned

  • r5h: R-matrix: FK5 rotation wrt Hipparcos (Note 2)
  • s5h: R-vector: FK5 spin wrt Hipparcos (Note 3)

Notes

  1. This function models the FK5 to Hipparcos transformation as a pure rotation and spin; zonal errors in the FK5 catalogue are not taken into account.

  2. The r-matrix r5h operates in the sense:

      P_Hipparcos = r5h x P_FK5

    where PFK5 is a p-vector in the FK5 frame, and PHipparcos is the equivalent Hipparcos p-vector.

  3. The r-vector s5h represents the time derivative of the FK5 to Hipparcos rotation. The units are radians per year (Julian, TDB).

Called

  • rv2m: r-vector to r-matrix

Reference

  • F.Mignard & M.Froeschle, Astron. Astrophys. 354, 732-739 (2000).
source
ERFA.fk5hzMethod
fk5hz(r5, d5, date1, date2)

Transform an FK5 (J2000.0) star position into the system of the Hipparcos catalogue, assuming zero Hipparcos proper motion.

Given

  • r5: FK5 RA (radians), equinox J2000.0, at date
  • d5: FK5 Dec (radians), equinox J2000.0, at date
  • date1, date2: TDB date (Notes 1,2)

Returned

  • rh: Hipparcos RA (radians)
  • dh: Hipparcos Dec (radians)

Notes

  1. This function converts a star position from the FK5 system to the Hipparcos system, in such a way that the Hipparcos proper motion is zero. Because such a star has, in general, a non-zero proper motion in the FK5 system, the function requires the date at which the position in the FK5 system was determined.

  2. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  3. The FK5 to Hipparcos transformation is modeled as a pure rotation and spin; zonal errors in the FK5 catalogue are not taken into account.

  4. The position returned by this function is in the Hipparcos reference system but at date date1+date2.

  5. See also fk52h, h2fk5, hfk5z.

Called

  • s2c: spherical coordinates to unit vector
  • fk5hip: FK5 to Hipparcos rotation and spin
  • sxp: multiply p-vector by scalar
  • rv2m: r-vector to r-matrix
  • trxp: product of transpose of r-matrix and p-vector
  • pxp: vector product of two p-vectors
  • c2s: p-vector to spherical
  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi

Reference

  • F.Mignard & M.Froeschle, 2000, Astron.Astrophys. 354, 732-739.
source
ERFA.fw2mMethod
fw2m(x, y, s, t)

Form rotation matrix given the Fukushima-Williams angles.

Given

  • gamb: F-W angle gamma_bar (radians)
  • phib: F-W angle phi_bar (radians)
  • psi: F-W angle psi (radians)
  • eps: F-W angle epsilon (radians)

Returned

  • r: Rotation matrix

Notes

  1. Naming the following points:

    • e = J2000.0 ecliptic pole,
    • p = GCRS pole,
    • E = ecliptic pole of date,
    • and P = CIP,

    the four Fukushima-Williams angles are as follows:

    • gamb = gamma = epE
    • phib = phi = pE
    • psi = psi = pEP
    • eps = epsilon = EP
  2. The matrix representing the combined effects of frame bias, precession and nutation is:

    NxPxB = R_1(-eps).R_3(-psi).R_1(phib).R_3(gamb)

  3. Three different matrices can be constructed, depending on the supplied angles:

    • To obtain the nutation x precession x frame bias matrix, generate the four precession angles, generate the nutation components and add them to the psi_bar and epsilon_A angles, and call the present function.

    • To obtain the precession x frame bias matrix, generate the four precession angles and call the present function.

    • To obtain the frame bias matrix, generate the four precession angles for date J2000.0 and call the present function.

    The nutation-only and precession-only matrices can if necessary be obtained by combining these three appropriately.

Called

  • ir: initialize r-matrix to identity
  • rz: rotate around Z-axis
  • rx: rotate around X-axis

Reference

  • Hilton, J. et al., 2006, Celest.Mech.Dyn.Astron. 94, 351
source
ERFA.fw2xyMethod
fw2xy(gamb, phib, psi, eps)

CIP X,Y given Fukushima-Williams bias-precession-nutation angles.

Given

  • gamb: F-W angle gamma_bar (radians)
  • phib: F-W angle phi_bar (radians)
  • psi: F-W angle psi (radians)
  • eps: F-W angle epsilon (radians)

Returned

  • x, y: CIP unit vector X,Y

Notes

  1. Naming the following points:

    • e = J2000.0 ecliptic pole,
    • p = GCRS pole
    • E = ecliptic pole of date,
    • and P = CIP,

    the four Fukushima-Williams angles are as follows:

    • gamb = gamma = epE
    • phib = phi = pE
    • psi = psi = pEP
    • eps = epsilon = EP
  2. The matrix representing the combined effects of frame bias, precession and nutation is:

    NxPxB = R_1(-epsA).R_3(-psi).R_1(phib).R_3(gamb)

    The returned values x,y are elements [3, 1] and [2, 1] of the matrix. Near J2000.0, they are essentially angles in radians.

Called

  • fw2m: F-W angles to r-matrix
  • bpn2xy: extract CIP X,Y coordinates from NPB matrix

Reference

  • Hilton, J. et al., 2006, Celest.Mech.Dyn.Astron. 94, 351
source
ERFA.g2icrsMethod
g2icrs(dl, db)

Transformation from Galactic Coordinates to ICRS.

Given

  • dl: Galactic longitude (radians)
  • db: Galactic latitude (radians)

Returned

  • dr: ICRS right ascension (radians)
  • dd: ICRS declination (radians)

Notes

  1. The IAU 1958 system of Galactic coordinates was defined with respect to the now obsolete reference system FK4 B1950.0. When interpreting the system in a modern context, several factors have to be taken into account:

    • The inclusion in FK4 positions of the E-terms of aberration.

    • The distortion of the FK4 proper motion system by differential

    • Galactic rotation.

    • The use of the B1950.0 equinox rather than the now-standard

    • J2000.0.

    • The frame bias between ICRS and the J2000.0 mean place system.

    The Hipparcos Catalogue (Perryman & ESA 1997) provides a rotation matrix that transforms directly between ICRS and Galactic coordinates with the above factors taken into account. The matrix is derived from three angles, namely the ICRS coordinates of the Galactic pole and the longitude of the ascending node of the galactic equator on the ICRS equator. They are given in degrees to five decimal places and for canonical purposes are regarded as exact. In the Hipparcos Catalogue the matrix elements are given to 10 decimal places (about 20 microarcsec). In the present ERFA function the matrix elements have been recomputed from the canonical three angles and are given to 30 decimal places.

  2. The inverse transformation is performed by the function icrs2g.

Called

  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi
  • anpm: normalize angle into range +/- pi
  • s2c: spherical coordinates to unit vector
  • trxp: product of transpose of r-matrix and p-vector
  • c2s: p-vector to spherical

Reference

  • Perryman M.A.C. & ESA, 1997, ESA SP-1200, The Hipparcos and Tycho catalogues. Astrometric and photometric star catalogues derived from the ESA Hipparcos Space Astrometry Mission. ESA Publications Division, Noordwijk, Netherlands.
source
ERFA.gc2gdMethod
gc2gd(n::Ellipsoid, xyz)

Transform geocentric coordinates to geodetic using the specified reference ellipsoid.

Given

  • n: Ellipsoid identifier (Note 1)
  • xyz: Geocentric vector (Note 2)

Returned

  • elong: Longitude (radians, east +ve, Note 3)
  • phi: Latitude (geodetic, radians, Note 3)
  • height: Height above ellipsoid (geodetic, Notes 2,3)

Notes

  1. The identifier n is a number that specifies the choice of reference ellipsoid. The following are supported:

  2. The geocentric vector (xyz, given) and height (height, returned) are in meters.

  3. An error status -1 means that the identifier n is illegal. An error status -2 is theoretically impossible. In all error cases, all three results are set to -1e9.

  4. The inverse transformation is performed in the function gd2gc.

Called

  • eform: Earth reference ellipsoids
  • gc2gde: geocentric to geodetic transformation, general
source
ERFA.gc2gdeMethod
gc2gde(a, f, xyz)

Transform geocentric coordinates to geodetic for a reference ellipsoid of specified form.

Given

  • a: Equatorial radius (Notes 2,4)
  • f: Flattening (Note 3)
  • xyz: Geocentric vector (Note 4)

Returned

  • elong: Longitude (radians, east +ve)
  • phi: Latitude (geodetic, radians)
  • height: Height above ellipsoid (geodetic, Note 4)

Notes

  1. This function is based on the GCONV2H Fortran subroutine by Toshio Fukushima (see reference).

  2. The equatorial radius, a, can be in any units, but meters is the conventional choice.

  3. The flattening, f, is (for the Earth) a value around 0.00335, i.e. around 1/298.

  4. The equatorial radius, a, and the geocentric vector, xyz, must be given in the same units, and determine the units of the returned height, height.

  5. If an error occurs (status < 0), elong, phi and height are unchanged.

  6. The inverse transformation is performed in the function gd2gce.

  7. The transformation for a standard ellipsoid (such as WGS84) can more conveniently be performed by calling gc2gd, which uses a numerical code to identify the required A and F values.

Reference

  • Fukushima, T., "Transformation from Cartesian to geodetic coordinates accelerated by Halley's method", J.Geodesy (2006) 79: 689-693
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ERFA.gd2gcMethod
gd2gc(n, elong, phi, height)

Transform geodetic coordinates to geocentric using the specified reference ellipsoid.

Given

  • n: Ellipsoid identifier (Note 1)
  • elong: Longitude (radians, east +ve)
  • phi: Latitude (geodetic, radians, Note 3)
  • height: Height above ellipsoid (geodetic, Notes 2,3)

Returned

  • xyz: Geocentric vector (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The identifier n is a number that specifies the choice of reference ellipsoid. The following are supported:

    nellipsoid
    1WGS84
    2GRS80
    3WGS72

    The n value has no significance outside the ERFA software. For convenience, the Ellipsoid enum provides these values.

  2. The height (height, given) and the geocentric vector (xyz, returned) are in meters.

  3. No validation is performed on the arguments elong, phi and height. An error status -1 means that the identifier n is illegal. An error status -2 protects against cases that would lead to arithmetic exceptions. In all error cases, xyz is set to zeros.

  4. The inverse transformation is performed in the function gc2gd.

Called

  • eform: Earth reference ellipsoids
  • gd2gce: geodetic to geocentric transformation, general
  • zp: zero p-vector
source
ERFA.gd2gceMethod
gd2gce(a, f, elong, phi, height)

Transform geodetic coordinates to geocentric for a reference ellipsoid of specified form.

Given

  • a: Equatorial radius (Notes 1,4)
  • f: Flattening (Notes 2,4)
  • elong: Longitude (radians, east +ve)
  • phi: Latitude (geodetic, radians, Note 4)
  • height: Height above ellipsoid (geodetic, Notes 3,4)

Returned

  • xyz: Geocentric vector (Note 3)

Notes

  1. The equatorial radius, a, can be in any units, but meters is the conventional choice.

  2. The flattening, f, is (for the Earth) a value around 0.00335, i.e. around 1/298.

  3. The equatorial radius, a, and the height, height, must be given in the same units, and determine the units of the returned geocentric vector, xyz.

  4. No validation is performed on individual arguments. The error status -1 protects against (unrealistic) cases that would lead to arithmetic exceptions. If an error occurs, xyz is unchanged.

  5. The inverse transformation is performed in the function gc2gde.

  6. The transformation for a standard ellipsoid (such as WGS84) can more conveniently be performed by calling gd2gc, which uses a numerical code to identify the required a and f values.

References

  • Green, R.M., Spherical Astronomy, Cambridge University Press, (1985) Section 4.5, p96.

  • Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, P. Kenneth Seidelmann (ed), University Science Books (1992), Section 4.22, p202.

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ERFA.gmst00Function
gmst00(uta, utb, tta, ttb)

Greenwich mean sidereal time (model consistent with IAU 2000 resolutions).

Given

  • uta, utb: UT1 as a 2-part Julian Date (Notes 1,2)
  • tta, ttb: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Notes 1,2)

Returned

  • Greenwich mean sidereal time (radians)

Notes

  1. The UT1 and TT dates uta+utb and tta+ttb respectively, are both Julian Dates, apportioned in any convenient way between the argument pairs. For example, JD=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    Part APart BMethod
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable (in the case of UT; the TT is not at all critical in this respect). The J2000 and MJD methods are good compromises between resolution and convenience. For UT, the date & time method is best matched to the algorithm that is used by the Earth Rotation Angle function, called internally: maximum precision is delivered when the uta argument is for 0hrs UT1 on the day in question and the utb argument lies in the range 0 to 1, or vice versa.

  2. Both UT1 and TT are required, UT1 to predict the Earth rotation and TT to predict the effects of precession. If UT1 is used for both purposes, errors of order 100 microarcseconds result.

  3. This GMST is compatible with the IAU 2000 resolutions and must be used only in conjunction with other IAU 2000 compatible components such as precession-nutation and equation of the equinoxes.

  4. The result is returned in the range 0 to 2pi.

  5. The algorithm is from Capitaine et al. (2003) and IERS Conventions 2003.

Called

  • era00: Earth rotation angle, IAU 2000
  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi

References

  • Capitaine, N., Wallace, P.T. and McCarthy, D.D., "Expressions to implement the IAU 2000 definition of UT1", Astronomy & Astrophysics, 406, 1135-1149 (2003)

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

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ERFA.gmst06Function
gmst06(uta, utb, tta, ttb)

Greenwich mean sidereal time (consistent with IAU 2006 precession).

Given

  • uta, utb: UT1 as a 2-part Julian Date (Notes 1,2)
  • tta, ttb: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Notes 1,2)

Returned

  • Greenwich mean sidereal time (radians)

Notes

  1. The UT1 and TT dates uta+utb and tta+ttb respectively, are both Julian Dates, apportioned in any convenient way between the argument pairs. For example, JD=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    Part APart BMethod
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable (in the case of UT; the TT is not at all critical in this respect). The J2000 and MJD methods are good compromises between resolution and convenience. For UT, the date & time method is best matched to the algorithm that is used by the Earth rotation angle function, called internally: maximum precision is delivered when the uta argument is for 0hrs UT1 on the day in question and the utb argument lies in the range 0 to 1, or vice versa.

  2. Both UT1 and TT are required, UT1 to predict the Earth rotation and TT to predict the effects of precession. If UT1 is used for both purposes, errors of order 100 microarcseconds result.

  3. This GMST is compatible with the IAU 2006 precession and must not be used with other precession models.

  4. The result is returned in the range 0 to 2pi.

Called

  • era00: Earth rotation angle, IAU 2000
  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi

Reference

  • Capitaine, N., Wallace, P.T. & Chapront, J., 2005, Astron.Astrophys. 432, 355
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ERFA.gmst82Function
gmst82(dj1, dj2)

Universal Time to Greenwich mean sidereal time (IAU 1982 model).

Given

  • dj1, dj2: UT1 Julian Date (see note)

Returned

  • Greenwich mean sidereal time (radians)

Notes

  1. The UT1 date dj1+dj2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the arguments dj1 and dj2. For example, JD(UT1)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    dj1dj2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 and MJD methods are good compromises between resolution and convenience. The date & time method is best matched to the algorithm used: maximum accuracy (or, at least, minimum noise) is delivered when the dj1 argument is for 0hrs UT1 on the day in question and the dj2 argument lies in the range 0 to 1, or vice versa.

  2. The algorithm is based on the IAU 1982 expression. This is always described as giving the GMST at 0 hours UT1. In fact, it gives the difference between the GMST and the UT, the steady 4-minutes-per-day drawing-ahead of ST with respect to UT. When whole days are ignored, the expression happens to equal the GMST at 0 hours UT1 each day.

  3. In this function, the entire UT1 (the sum of the two arguments dj1 and dj2) is used directly as the argument for the standard formula, the constant term of which is adjusted by 12 hours to take account of the noon phasing of Julian Date. The UT1 is then added, but omitting whole days to conserve accuracy.

Called

  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi

References

  • Transactions of the International Astronomical Union, XVIII B, 67 (1983).

  • Aoki et al., Astron. Astrophys. 105, 359-361 (1982).

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ERFA.gst00aFunction
gst00a(uta, utb, tta, ttb)

Greenwich apparent sidereal time (consistent with IAU 2000 resolutions).

Given

  • uta, utb: UT1 as a 2-part Julian Date (Notes 1,2)
  • tta, ttb: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Notes 1,2)

Returned

  • Greenwich apparent sidereal time (radians)

Notes

  1. The UT1 and TT dates uta+utb and tta+ttb respectively, are both Julian Dates, apportioned in any convenient way between the argument pairs. For example, JD=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    Part APart BMethod
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable (in the case of UT; the TT is not at all critical in this respect). The J2000 and MJD methods are good compromises between resolution and convenience. For UT, the date & time method is best matched to the algorithm that is used by the Earth Rotation Angle function, called internally: maximum precision is delivered when the uta argument is for 0hrs UT1 on the day in question and the utb argument lies in the range 0 to 1, or vice versa.

  2. Both UT1 and TT are required, UT1 to predict the Earth rotation and TT to predict the effects of precession-nutation. If UT1 is used for both purposes, errors of order 100 microarcseconds result.

  3. This GAST is compatible with the IAU 2000 resolutions and must be used only in conjunction with other IAU 2000 compatible components such as precession-nutation.

  4. The result is returned in the range 0 to 2pi.

  5. The algorithm is from Capitaine et al. (2003) and IERS Conventions 2003.

Called

  • gmst00: Greenwich mean sidereal time, IAU 2000
  • ee00a: equation of the equinoxes, IAU 2000A
  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi

References

  • Capitaine, N., Wallace, P.T. and McCarthy, D.D., "Expressions to implement the IAU 2000 definition of UT1", Astronomy & Astrophysics, 406, 1135-1149 (2003)

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

source
ERFA.gst00bFunction
gst00b(dr, dd)

Greenwich apparent sidereal time (consistent with IAU 2000 resolutions but using the truncated nutation model IAU 2000B).

Given

  • uta, utb: UT1 as a 2-part Julian Date (Notes 1,2)

Returned

  • Greenwich apparent sidereal time (radians)

Notes

  1. The UT1 date uta+utb is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the argument pair. For example, JD=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    utautbMethod
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 and MJD methods are good compromises between resolution and convenience. For UT, the date & time method is best matched to the algorithm that is used by the Earth Rotation Angle function, called internally: maximum precision is delivered when the uta argument is for 0hrs UT1 on the day in question and the utb argument lies in the range 0 to 1, or vice versa.

  2. The result is compatible with the IAU 2000 resolutions, except that accuracy has been compromised for the sake of speed and convenience in two respects:

    • UT is used instead of TDB (or TT) to compute the precession component of GMST and the equation of the equinoxes. This results in errors of order 0.1 mas at present.

    • The IAU 2000B abridged nutation model (McCarthy & Luzum, 2001) is used, introducing errors of up to 1 mas.

  3. This GAST is compatible with the IAU 2000 resolutions and must be used only in conjunction with other IAU 2000 compatible components such as precession-nutation.

  4. The result is returned in the range 0 to 2pi.

  5. The algorithm is from Capitaine et al. (2003) and IERS Conventions 2003.

Called

  • gmst00: Greenwich mean sidereal time, IAU 2000
  • ee00b: equation of the equinoxes, IAU 2000B
  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi

References

  • Capitaine, N., Wallace, P.T. and McCarthy, D.D., "Expressions to implement the IAU 2000 definition of UT1", Astronomy & Astrophysics, 406, 1135-1149 (2003)

  • McCarthy, D.D. & Luzum, B.J., "An abridged model of the precession-nutation of the celestial pole", Celestial Mechanics & Dynamical Astronomy, 85, 37-49 (2003)

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

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ERFA.gst06Method
gst06(uta, utb, tta, ttb, rnpb)

Greenwich apparent sidereal time, IAU 2006, given the NPB matrix.

Given

  • uta, utb: UT1 as a 2-part Julian Date (Notes 1,2)
  • tta, ttb: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Notes 1,2)
  • rnpb: Nutation x precession x bias matrix

Returned

  • Greenwich apparent sidereal time (radians)

Notes

  1. The UT1 and TT dates uta+utb and tta+ttb respectively, are both Julian Dates, apportioned in any convenient way between the argument pairs. For example, JD=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    Part APart BMethod
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable (in the case of UT; the TT is not at all critical in this respect). The J2000 and MJD methods are good compromises between resolution and convenience. For UT, the date & time method is best matched to the algorithm that is used by the Earth rotation angle function, called internally: maximum precision is delivered when the uta argument is for 0hrs UT1 on the day in question and the utb argument lies in the range 0 to 1, or vice versa.

  2. Both UT1 and TT are required, UT1 to predict the Earth rotation and TT to predict the effects of precession-nutation. If UT1 is used for both purposes, errors of order 100 microarcseconds result.

  3. Although the function uses the IAU 2006 series for s+XY/2, it is otherwise independent of the precession-nutation model and can in practice be used with any equinox-based NPB matrix.

  4. The result is returned in the range 0 to 2pi.

Called

  • bpn2xy: extract CIP X,Y coordinates from NPB matrix
  • s06: the CIO locator s, given X,Y, IAU 2006
  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi
  • era00: Earth rotation angle, IAU 2000
  • eors: equation of the origins, given NPB matrix and s

Reference

  • Wallace, P.T. & Capitaine, N., 2006, Astron.Astrophys. 459, 981
source
ERFA.gst06aFunction
gst06a(uta, utb, tta, ttb)

Greenwich apparent sidereal time (consistent with IAU 2000 and 2006 resolutions).

Given

  • uta, utb: UT1 as a 2-part Julian Date (Notes 1,2)
  • tta, ttb: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Notes 1,2)

Returned

  • Greenwich apparent sidereal time (radians)

Notes

  1. The UT1 and TT dates uta+utb and tta+ttb respectively, are both Julian Dates, apportioned in any convenient way between the argument pairs. For example, JD=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    Part APart BMethod
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable (in the case of UT; the TT is not at all critical in this respect). The J2000 and MJD methods are good compromises between resolution and convenience. For UT, the date & time method is best matched to the algorithm that is used by the Earth rotation angle function, called internally: maximum precision is delivered when the uta argument is for 0hrs UT1 on the day in question and the utb argument lies in the range 0 to 1, or vice versa.

  2. Both UT1 and TT are required, UT1 to predict the Earth rotation and TT to predict the effects of precession-nutation. If UT1 is used for both purposes, errors of order 100 microarcseconds result.

  3. This GAST is compatible with the IAU 2000/2006 resolutions and must be used only in conjunction with IAU 2006 precession and IAU 2000A nutation.

  4. The result is returned in the range 0 to 2pi.

Called

  • pnm06a: classical NPB matrix, IAU 2006/2000A
  • gst06: Greenwich apparent ST, IAU 2006, given NPB matrix

Reference

  • Wallace, P.T. & Capitaine, N., 2006, Astron.Astrophys. 459, 981
source
ERFA.gst94Function
gst94(dr, dd)

Greenwich apparent sidereal time (consistent with IAU 1982/94 resolutions).

Given

  • uta, utb: UT1 as a 2-part Julian Date (Notes 1,2)

Returned

  • Greenwich apparent sidereal time (radians)

Notes

  1. The UT1 date uta+utb is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the argument pair. For example, JD=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    utautbMethod
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 and MJD methods are good compromises between resolution and convenience. For UT, the date & time method is best matched to the algorithm that is used by the Earth Rotation Angle function, called internally: maximum precision is delivered when the uta argument is for 0hrs UT1 on the day in question and the utb argument lies in the range 0 to 1, or vice versa.

  2. The result is compatible with the IAU 1982 and 1994 resolutions, except that accuracy has been compromised for the sake of convenience in that UT is used instead of TDB (or TT) to compute the equation of the equinoxes.

  3. This GAST must be used only in conjunction with contemporaneous IAU standards such as 1976 precession, 1980 obliquity and 1982 nutation. It is not compatible with the IAU 2000 resolutions.

  4. The result is returned in the range 0 to 2pi.

Called

  • gmst82: Greenwich mean sidereal time, IAU 1982
  • eqeq94: equation of the equinoxes, IAU 1994
  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi

References

  • Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, P. Kenneth Seidelmann (ed), University Science Books (1992)

  • IAU Resolution C7, Recommendation 3 (1994)

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ERFA.h2fk5Method
h2fk5(ra, dec, dra, ddec, px, rv)

Transform Hipparcos star data into the FK5 (J2000.0) system.

Given (all Hipparcos, epoch J2000.0)

  • rh: RA (radians)
  • dh: Dec (radians)
  • drh: Proper motion in RA (dRA/dt, rad/Jyear)
  • ddh: Proper motion in Dec (dDec/dt, rad/Jyear)
  • pxh: Parallax (arcsec)
  • rvh: Radial velocity (km/s, positive = receding)

Returned (all FK5, equinox J2000.0, epoch J2000.0)

  • r5: RA (radians)
  • d5: Dec (radians)
  • dr5: Proper motion in RA (dRA/dt, rad/Jyear)
  • dd5: Proper motion in Dec (dDec/dt, rad/Jyear)
  • px5: Parallax (arcsec)
  • rv5: Radial velocity (km/s, positive = receding)

Notes

  1. This function transforms Hipparcos star positions and proper motions into FK5 J2000.0.

  2. The proper motions in RA are dRA/dt rather than cos(Dec)*dRA/dt, and are per year rather than per century.

  3. The FK5 to Hipparcos transformation is modeled as a pure rotation and spin; zonal errors in the FK5 catalog are not taken into account.

  4. See also fk52h, fk5hz, hfk5z.

Called

  • starpv: star catalog data to space motion pv-vector
  • fk5hip: FK5 to Hipparcos rotation and spin
  • rv2m: r-vector to r-matrix
  • rxp: product of r-matrix and p-vector
  • trxp: product of transpose of r-matrix and p-vector
  • pxp: vector product of two p-vectors
  • pmp: p-vector minus p-vector
  • pvstar: space motion pv-vector to star catalog data

Reference

  • F.Mignard & M.Froeschle, Astron. Astrophys. 354, 732-739 (2000).
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ERFA.hd2aeMethod
hd2ae(h, d, p)

Equatorial to horizon coordinates: transform hour angle and declination to azimuth and altitude.

Given

  • ha: hour angle (local)
  • dec: declination
  • phi: site latitude

Returned

  • az: azimuth
  • el: altitude (informally, elevation)

Notes

  1. All the arguments are angles in radians.

  2. Azimuth is returned in the range 0-2pi; north is zero, and east is +pi/2. Altitude is returned in the range +/- pi/2.

  3. The latitude phi is pi/2 minus the angle between the Earth's rotation axis and the adopted zenith. In many applications it will be sufficient to use the published geodetic latitude of the site. In very precise (sub-arcsecond) applications, phi can be corrected for polar motion.

  4. The returned azimuth az is with respect to the rotational north pole, as opposed to the ITRS pole, and for sub-arcsecond accuracy will need to be adjusted for polar motion if it is to be with respect to north on a map of the Earth's surface.

  5. Should the user wish to work with respect to the astronomical zenith rather than the geodetic zenith, phi will need to be adjusted for deflection of the vertical (often tens of arcseconds), and the zero point of the hour angle ha will also be affected.

  6. The transformation is the same as Vh = Rz(pi)Ry(pi/2-phi)Ve, where Vh and Ve are lefthanded unit vectors in the (az,el) and (ha,dec) systems respectively and Ry and Rz are rotations about first the y-axis and then the z-axis. (n.b. Rz(pi) simply reverses the signs of the x and y components.) For efficiency, the algorithm is written out rather than calling other utility functions. For applications that require even greater efficiency, additional savings are possible if constant terms such as functions of latitude are computed once and for all.

  7. Again for efficiency, no range checking of arguments is carried out.

source
ERFA.hd2paMethod
hd2pa(h, d, p)

Parallactic angle for a given hour angle and declination.

Given

  • ha: hour angle
  • dec: declination
  • phi: site latitude

Returned

Returns the parallactic angle

Notes

  1. All the arguments are angles in radians.

  2. The parallactic angle at a point in the sky is the position angle of the vertical, i.e. the angle between the directions to the north celestial pole and to the zenith respectively.

  3. The result is returned in the range -pi to +pi.

  4. At the pole itself a zero result is returned.

  5. The latitude phi is pi/2 minus the angle between the Earth's rotation axis and the adopted zenith. In many applications it will be sufficient to use the published geodetic latitude of the site. In very precise (sub-arcsecond) applications, phi can be corrected for polar motion.

  6. Should the user wish to work with respect to the astronomical zenith rather than the geodetic zenith, phi will need to be adjusted for deflection of the vertical (often tens of arcseconds), and the zero point of the hour angle ha will also be affected.

Reference

  • Smart, W.M., "Spherical Astronomy", Cambridge University Press, 6th edition (Green, 1977), p49.
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ERFA.hfk5zMethod
hfk5z(rh, dh, date1, date2)

Transform a Hipparcos star position into FK5 J2000.0, assuming zero Hipparcos proper motion.

Given

  • rh: Hipparcos RA (radians)
  • dh: Hipparcos Dec (radians)
  • date1, date2: TDB date (Note 1)

Returned (all FK5, equinox J2000.0, date date1+date2)

  • r5: RA (radians)
  • d5: Dec (radians)
  • dr5: FK5 RA proper motion (rad/year, Note 4)
  • dd5: Dec proper motion (rad/year, Note 4)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The proper motion in RA is dRA/dt rather than cos(Dec)*dRA/dt.

  3. The FK5 to Hipparcos transformation is modeled as a pure rotation and spin; zonal errors in the FK5 catalogue are not taken into account.

  4. It was the intention that Hipparcos should be a close approximation to an inertial frame, so that distant objects have zero proper motion; such objects have (in general) non-zero proper motion in FK5, and this function returns those fictitious proper motions.

  5. The position returned by this function is in the FK5 J2000.0 reference system but at date date1+date2.

  6. See also fk52h, h2fk5, fk5hz.

Called

  • s2c: spherical coordinates to unit vector
  • fk5hip: FK5 to Hipparcos rotation and spin
  • rxp: product of r-matrix and p-vector
  • sxp: multiply p-vector by scalar
  • rxr: product of two r-matrices
  • trxp: product of transpose of r-matrix and p-vector
  • pxp: vector product of two p-vectors
  • pv2s: pv-vector to spherical
  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi

Reference

  • F.Mignard & M.Froeschle, 2000, Astron.Astrophys. 354, 732-739.
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ERFA.icrs2gMethod
icrs2g(dr, dd)

Transformation from ICRS to Galactic Coordinates.

Given

  • dr: ICRS right ascension (radians)
  • dd: ICRS declination (radians)

Returned

  • dl: Galactic longitude (radians)
  • db: Galactic latitude (radians)

Notes

  1. The IAU 1958 system of Galactic coordinates was defined with respect to the now obsolete reference system FK4 B1950.0. When interpreting the system in a modern context, several factors have to be taken into account:

    • The inclusion in FK4 positions of the E-terms of aberration.

    • The distortion of the FK4 proper motion system by differential Galactic rotation.

    • The use of the B1950.0 equinox rather than the now-standard J2000.0.

    • The frame bias between ICRS and the J2000.0 mean place system.

    The Hipparcos Catalogue (Perryman & ESA 1997) provides a rotation matrix that transforms directly between ICRS and Galactic coordinates with the above factors taken into account. The matrix is derived from three angles, namely the ICRS coordinates of the Galactic pole and the longitude of the ascending node of the galactic equator on the ICRS equator. They are given in degrees to five decimal places and for canonical purposes are regarded as exact. In the Hipparcos Catalogue the matrix elements are given to 10 decimal places (about 20 microarcsec). In the present ERFA function the matrix elements have been recomputed from the canonical three angles and are given to 30 decimal places.

  2. The inverse transformation is performed by the function g2icrs.

Called

  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi
  • anpm: normalize angle into range +/- pi
  • s2c: spherical coordinates to unit vector
  • rxp: product of r-matrix and p-vector
  • c2s: p-vector to spherical

Reference

  • Perryman M.A.C. & ESA, 1997, ESA SP-1200, The Hipparcos and Tycho catalogues. Astrometric and photometric star catalogues derived from the ESA Hipparcos Space Astrometry Mission. ESA Publications Division, Noordwijk, Netherlands.
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ERFA.irFunction
ir()

Initialize an r-matrix to the identity matrix.

Deprecated

Use Array{Float64}(LinearAlgebra.I, 3, 3) instead.

Returned

  • r: r-matrix
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ERFA.jd2calMethod
jd2cal(dj1, dj2)

Julian Date to Gregorian year, month, day, and fraction of a day.

Given

  • dj1, dj2: Julian Date (Notes 1, 2)

Returned

  • iy: Year
  • im: Month
  • id: Day
  • fd: Fraction of day

Notes

  1. The earliest valid date is -68569.5 (-4900 March 1). The largest value accepted is 1e9.

  2. The Julian Date is apportioned in any convenient way between the arguments dj1 and dj2. For example, JD=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    dj1dj2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time
  3. In early eras the conversion is from the "proleptic Gregorian calendar"; no account is taken of the date(s) of adoption of the Gregorian calendar, nor is the AD/BC numbering convention observed.

Reference

  • Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, P. Kenneth Seidelmann (ed), University Science Books (1992), Section 12.92 (p604).
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ERFA.jdcalfMethod
jdcalf(ndp, dj1, dj2)

Julian Date to Gregorian Calendar, expressed in a form convenient for formatting messages: rounded to a specified precision.

Given

  • ndp: Number of decimal places of days in fraction
  • dj1, dj2: Dj1+dj2 = Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • iymdf: Year, month, day, fraction in Gregorian calendar

Notes

  1. The Julian Date is apportioned in any convenient way between the arguments dj1 and dj2. For example, JD=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    dj1dj2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time
  2. In early eras the conversion is from the "Proleptic Gregorian Calendar"; no account is taken of the date(s) of adoption of the Gregorian Calendar, nor is the AD/BC numbering convention observed.

  3. Refer to the function jd2cal.

  4. NDP should be 4 or less if internal overflows are to be avoided on machines which use 16-bit integers.

Called

  • jd2cal: JD to Gregorian calendar

Reference

  • Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, P. Kenneth Seidelmann (ed), University Science Books (1992), Section 12.92 (p604).
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ERFA.ldMethod
ld(bm, p, q, e, em, dlim)

Apply light deflection by a solar-system body, as part of transforming coordinate direction into natural direction.

Given

  • bm: Mass of the gravitating body (solar masses)
  • p: Direction from observer to source (unit vector)
  • q: Direction from body to source (unit vector)
  • e: Direction from body to observer (unit vector)
  • em: Distance from body to observer (au)
  • dlim: Deflection limiter (Note 4)

Returned

  • p1: Observer to deflected source (unit vector)

Notes

  1. The algorithm is based on Expr. (70) in Klioner (2003) and Expr. (7.63) in the Explanatory Supplement (Urban & Seidelmann 2013), with some rearrangement to minimize the effects of machine precision.

  2. The mass parameter bm can, as required, be adjusted in order to allow for such effects as quadrupole field.

  3. The barycentric position of the deflecting body should ideally correspond to the time of closest approach of the light ray to the body.

  4. The deflection limiter parameter dlim is phi^2/2, where phi is the angular separation (in radians) between source and body at which limiting is applied. As phi shrinks below the chosen threshold, the deflection is artificially reduced, reaching zero for phi = 0.

  5. The returned vector p1 is not normalized, but the consequential departure from unit magnitude is always negligible.

  6. The arguments p and p1 can be the same array.

  7. To accumulate total light deflection taking into account the contributions from several bodies, call the present function for each body in succession, in decreasing order of distance from the observer.

  8. For efficiency, validation is omitted. The supplied vectors must be of unit magnitude, and the deflection limiter non-zero and positive.

References

  • Urban, S. & Seidelmann, P. K. (eds), Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, 3rd ed., University Science Books (2013).

  • Klioner, Sergei A., "A practical relativistic model for micro- arcsecond astrometry in space", Astr. J. 125, 1580-1597 (2003).

Called

  • pdp: scalar product of two p-vectors
  • pxp: vector product of two p-vectors
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ERFA.ldnMethod
ldn(l::Vector{LDBODY}, ob, sc)

For a star, apply light deflection by multiple solar-system bodies, as part of transforming coordinate direction into natural direction.

Given

  • n: Number of bodies (note 1)
  • b: Data for each of the n bodies (Notes 1,2):
    • bm: Mass of the body (solar masses, Note 3)
    • dl: Deflection limiter (Note 4)
    • pv: Barycentric PV of the body (au, au/day)
  • ob: Barycentric position of the observer (au)
  • sc: Observer to star coord direction (unit vector)

Returned

  • sn: Observer to deflected star (unit vector)
  1. The array b contains n entries, one for each body to be considered. If n = 0, no gravitational light deflection will be applied, not even for the Sun.

  2. The array b should include an entry for the Sun as well as for any planet or other body to be taken into account. The entries should be in the order in which the light passes the body.

  3. In the entry in the b array for body i, the mass parameter b[i].bm can, as required, be adjusted in order to allow for such effects as quadrupole field.

  4. The deflection limiter parameter b[i].dl is phi^2/2, where phi is the angular separation (in radians) between star and body at which limiting is applied. As phi shrinks below the chosen threshold, the deflection is artificially reduced, reaching zero for phi = 0. Example values suitable for a terrestrial observer, together with masses, are as follows:

    body ib[i].bmb[i].dl
    Sun1.06e-6
    Jupiter0.000954353e-9
    Saturn0.000285743e-10
  5. For cases where the starlight passes the body before reaching the observer, the body is placed back along its barycentric track by the light time from that point to the observer. For cases where the body is "behind" the observer no such shift is applied. If a different treatment is preferred, the user has the option of instead using the ld function. Similarly, ld can be used for cases where the source is nearby, not a star.

  6. The returned vector sn is not normalized, but the consequential departure from unit magnitude is always negligible.

  7. The arguments sc and sn can be the same array.

  8. For efficiency, validation is omitted. The supplied masses must be greater than zero, the position and velocity vectors must be right, and the deflection limiter greater than zero.

Reference

  • Urban, S. & Seidelmann, P. K. (eds), Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, 3rd ed., University Science Books (2013), Section 7.2.4.

Called

  • erfa_cp: copy p-vector
  • pdp: scalar product of two p-vectors
  • pmp: p-vector minus p-vector
  • ppsp: p-vector plus scaled p-vector
  • pn: decompose p-vector into modulus and direction
  • ld: light deflection by a solar-system body
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ERFA.ldsunMethod
ldsun(p, e, em)

Deflection of starlight by the Sun.

Given

  • p: Direction from observer to star (unit vector)
  • e: Direction from Sun to observer (unit vector)
  • em: Distance from Sun to observer (au)

Returned

  • p1: Observer to deflected star (unit vector)

Notes

  1. The source is presumed to be sufficiently distant that its directions seen from the Sun and the observer are essentially the same.

  2. The deflection is restrained when the angle between the star and the center of the Sun is less than a threshold value, falling to zero deflection for zero separation. The chosen threshold value is within the solar limb for all solar-system applications, and is about 5 arcminutes for the case of a terrestrial observer.

  3. The arguments p and p1 can be the same array.

Called

  • ld: light deflection by a solar-system body
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ERFA.lteceqFunction
lteceq(epj, dr, dd)

Transformation from ecliptic coordinates (mean equinox and ecliptic of date) to ICRS RA,Dec, using a long-term precession model.

Given

  • epj: Julian epoch (TT)
  • dl, db: Ecliptic longitude and latitude (radians)

Returned

  • dr, dd: ICRS right ascension and declination (radians)
  1. No assumptions are made about whether the coordinates represent starlight and embody astrometric effects such as parallax or aberration.

  2. The transformation is approximately that from ecliptic longitude and latitude (mean equinox and ecliptic of date) to mean J2000.0 right ascension and declination, with only frame bias (always less than 25 mas) to disturb this classical picture.

  3. The Vondrak et al. (2011, 2012) 400 millennia precession model agrees with the IAU 2006 precession at J2000.0 and stays within 100 microarcseconds during the 20th and 21st centuries. It is accurate to a few arcseconds throughout the historical period, worsening to a few tenths of a degree at the end of the +/- 200,000 year time span.

Called

  • s2c: spherical coordinates to unit vector
  • ltecm: J2000.0 to ecliptic rotation matrix, long term
  • trxp: product of transpose of r-matrix and p-vector
  • c2s: unit vector to spherical coordinates
  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi
  • anpm: normalize angle into range +/- pi

References

  • Vondrak, J., Capitaine, N. and Wallace, P., 2011, New precession expressions, valid for long time intervals, Astron.Astrophys. 534, A22

  • Vondrak, J., Capitaine, N. and Wallace, P., 2012, New precession expressions, valid for long time intervals (Corrigendum), Astron.Astrophys. 541, C1

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ERFA.ltecmFunction
ltecm(dr, dd)

ICRS equatorial to ecliptic rotation matrix, long-term.

Given

  • epj: Julian epoch (TT)

Returned

  • rm: ICRS to ecliptic rotation matrix

Notes

  1. The matrix is in the sense

    E_ep = rm x P_ICRS,

    where P_ICRS is a vector with respect to ICRS right ascension and declination axes and E_ep is the same vector with respect to the (inertial) ecliptic and equinox of epoch epj.

  2. P_ICRS is a free vector, merely a direction, typically of unit magnitude, and not bound to any particular spatial origin, such as the Earth, Sun or SSB. No assumptions are made about whether it represents starlight and embodies astrometric effects such as parallax or aberration. The transformation is approximately that between mean J2000.0 right ascension and declination and ecliptic longitude and latitude, with only frame bias (always less than 25 mas) to disturb this classical picture.

  3. The Vondrak et al. (2011, 2012) 400 millennia precession model agrees with the IAU 2006 precession at J2000.0 and stays within 100 microarcseconds during the 20th and 21st centuries. It is accurate to a few arcseconds throughout the historical period, worsening to a few tenths of a degree at the end of the +/- 200,000 year time span.

Called

  • ltpequ: equator pole, long term
  • ltpecl: ecliptic pole, long term
  • pxp: vector product
  • pn: normalize vector

References

  • Vondrak, J., Capitaine, N. and Wallace, P., 2011, New precession expressions, valid for long time intervals, Astron.Astrophys. 534, A22

  • Vondrak, J., Capitaine, N. and Wallace, P., 2012, New precession expressions, valid for long time intervals (Corrigendum), Astron.Astrophys. 541, C1

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ERFA.lteqecFunction
lteqec(epj, dr, dd)

Transformation from ICRS equatorial coordinates to ecliptic coordinates (mean equinox and ecliptic of date) using a long-term precession model.

Given

  • epj: Julian epoch (TT)
  • dr, dd: ICRS right ascension and declination (radians)

Returned

  • dl, db: Ecliptic longitude and latitude (radians)
  1. No assumptions are made about whether the coordinates represent starlight and embody astrometric effects such as parallax or aberration.

  2. The transformation is approximately that from mean J2000.0 right ascension and declination to ecliptic longitude and latitude (mean equinox and ecliptic of date), with only frame bias (always less than 25 mas) to disturb this classical picture.

  3. The Vondrak et al. (2011, 2012) 400 millennia precession model agrees with the IAU 2006 precession at J2000.0 and stays within 100 microarcseconds during the 20th and 21st centuries. It is accurate to a few arcseconds throughout the historical period, worsening to a few tenths of a degree at the end of the +/- 200,000 year time span.

Called

  • s2c: spherical coordinates to unit vector
  • ltecm: J2000.0 to ecliptic rotation matrix, long term
  • rxp: product of r-matrix and p-vector
  • c2s: unit vector to spherical coordinates
  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi
  • anpm: normalize angle into range +/- pi

References

  • Vondrak, J., Capitaine, N. and Wallace, P., 2011, New precession expressions, valid for long time intervals, Astron.Astrophys. 534, A22

  • Vondrak, J., Capitaine, N. and Wallace, P., 2012, New precession expressions, valid for long time intervals (Corrigendum), Astron.Astrophys. 541, C1

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ERFA.ltpFunction
ltp(dr, dd)

Long-term precession matrix.

Given

  • epj: Julian epoch (TT)

Returned

  • rp: Precession matrix, J2000.0 to date

Notes

  1. The matrix is in the sense

    P_date = rp x P_J2000,

    where P_J2000 is a vector with respect to the J2000.0 mean equator and equinox and P_date is the same vector with respect to the equator and equinox of epoch epj.

  2. The Vondrak et al. (2011, 2012) 400 millennia precession model agrees with the IAU 2006 precession at J2000.0 and stays within 100 microarcseconds during the 20th and 21st centuries. It is accurate to a few arcseconds throughout the historical period, worsening to a few tenths of a degree at the end of the +/- 200,000 year time span.

Called

  • ltpequ: equator pole, long term
  • ltpecl: ecliptic pole, long term
  • pxp: vector product
  • pn: normalize vector

References

  • Vondrak, J., Capitaine, N. and Wallace, P., 2011, New precession expressions, valid for long time intervals, Astron.Astrophys. 534, A22

  • Vondrak, J., Capitaine, N. and Wallace, P., 2012, New precession expressions, valid for long time intervals (Corrigendum), Astron.Astrophys. 541, C1

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ERFA.ltpbFunction
ltpb(dr, dd)

Long-term precession matrix, including ICRS frame bias.

Given

  • epj: Julian epoch (TT)

Returned

  • rpb: Precession-bias matrix, J2000.0 to date

Notes

  1. The matrix is in the sense

    P_date = rpb x P_ICRS,

    where P_ICRS is a vector in the Geocentric Celestial Reference System, and P_date is the vector with respect to the Celestial Intermediate Reference System at that date but with nutation neglected.

  2. A first order frame bias formulation is used, of sub- microarcsecond accuracy compared with a full 3D rotation.

  3. The Vondrak et al. (2011, 2012) 400 millennia precession model agrees with the IAU 2006 precession at J2000.0 and stays within 100 microarcseconds during the 20th and 21st centuries. It is accurate to a few arcseconds throughout the historical period, worsening to a few tenths of a degree at the end of the +/- 200,000 year time span.

References

  • Vondrak, J., Capitaine, N. and Wallace, P., 2011, New precession expressions, valid for long time intervals, Astron.Astrophys. 534, A22

  • Vondrak, J., Capitaine, N. and Wallace, P., 2012, New precession expressions, valid for long time intervals (Corrigendum), Astron.Astrophys. 541, C1

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ERFA.ltpeclFunction
ltpecl(epj)

Long-term precession of the ecliptic.

Given

  • epj: Julian epoch (TT)

Returned

  • vec: Ecliptic pole unit vector

Notes

  1. The returned vector is with respect to the J2000.0 mean equator and equinox.

  2. The Vondrak et al. (2011, 2012) 400 millennia precession model agrees with the IAU 2006 precession at J2000.0 and stays within 100 microarcseconds during the 20th and 21st centuries. It is accurate to a few arcseconds throughout the historical period, worsening to a few tenths of a degree at the end of the +/- 200,000 year time span.

References

  • Vondrak, J., Capitaine, N. and Wallace, P., 2011, New precession expressions, valid for long time intervals, Astron.Astrophys. 534, A22

  • Vondrak, J., Capitaine, N. and Wallace, P., 2012, New precession expressions, valid for long time intervals (Corrigendum), Astron.Astrophys. 541, C1

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ERFA.ltpequFunction
ltpequ(epj)

Long-term precession of the equator.

Given

  • epj: Julian epoch (TT)

Returned

  • veq: Equator pole unit vector

Notes

  1. The returned vector is with respect to the J2000.0 mean equator and equinox.

  2. The Vondrak et al. (2011, 2012) 400 millennia precession model agrees with the IAU 2006 precession at J2000.0 and stays within 100 microarcseconds during the 20th and 21st centuries. It is accurate to a few arcseconds throughout the historical period, worsening to a few tenths of a degree at the end of the +/- 200,000 year time span.

References

  • Vondrak, J., Capitaine, N. and Wallace, P., 2011, New precession expressions, valid for long time intervals, Astron.Astrophys. 534, A22

  • Vondrak, J., Capitaine, N. and Wallace, P., 2012, New precession expressions, valid for long time intervals (Corrigendum), Astron.Astrophys. 541, C1

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ERFA.moon98Method
moon98(date1, date2)

Approximate geocentric position and velocity of the Moon.

n.b. Not IAU-endorsed and without canonical status.

Given

  • date1: TT date part A (Notes 1,4)
  • date2: TT date part B (Notes 1,4)

Returned

  • pv: Moon p,v, GCRS (AU, AU/d, Note 5)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience. The limited accuracy of the present algorithm is such that any of the methods is satisfactory.

  2. This function is a full implementation of the algorithm published by Meeus (see reference) except that the light-time correction to the Moon's mean longitude has been omitted.

  3. Comparisons with ELP/MPP02 over the interval 1950-2100 gave RMS errors of 2.9 arcsec in geocentric direction, 6.1 km in position and 36 mm/s in velocity. The worst case errors were 18.3 arcsec in geocentric direction, 31.7 km in position and 172 mm/s in velocity.

  4. The original algorithm is expressed in terms of "dynamical time", which can either be TDB or TT without any significant change in accuracy. UT cannot be used without incurring significant errors (30 arcsec in the present era) due to the Moon's 0.5 arcsec/sec movement.

  5. The result is with respect to the GCRS (the same as J2000.0 mean equator and equinox to within 23 mas).

  6. Velocity is obtained by a complete analytical differentiation of the Meeus model.

  7. The Meeus algorithm generates position and velocity in mean ecliptic coordinates of date, which the present function then rotates into GCRS. Because the ecliptic system is precessing, there is a coupling between this spin (about 1.4 degrees per century) and the Moon position that produces a small velocity contribution. In the present function this effect is neglected as it corresponds to a maximum difference of less than 3 mm/s and increases the RMS error by only 0.4%.

References

  • Meeus, J., Astronomical Algorithms, 2nd edition, Willmann-Bell, 1998, p337.

  • Simon, J.L., Bretagnon, P., Chapront, J., Chapront-Touze, M., Francou, G. & Laskar, J., Astron.Astrophys., 1994, 282, 663

Called

  • s2pv: spherical coordinates to pv-vector
  • pfw06: bias-precession F-W angles, IAU 2006
  • ir: initialize r-matrix to identity
  • rz: rotate around Z-axis
  • rx: rotate around X-axis
  • rxpv: product of r-matrix and pv-vector
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ERFA.num00aFunction
num00a(date1, date2)

Form the matrix of nutation for a given date, IAU 2000A model.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • rmatn: Nutation matrix

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The matrix operates in the sense V(true) = rmatn * V(mean), where the p-vector V(true) is with respect to the true equatorial triad of date and the p-vector V(mean) is with respect to the mean equatorial triad of date.

  3. A faster, but slightly less accurate result (about 1 mas), can be obtained by using instead the num00b function.

Called

  • pn00a: bias/precession/nutation, IAU 2000A

Reference

  • Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, P. Kenneth Seidelmann (ed), University Science Books (1992), Section 3.222-3 (p114).
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ERFA.num00bFunction
num00b(date1, date2)

Form the matrix of nutation for a given date, IAU 2000B model.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • rmatn: Nutation matrix

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The matrix operates in the sense V(true) = rmatn * V(mean), where the p-vector V(true) is with respect to the true equatorial triad of date and the p-vector V(mean) is with respect to the mean equatorial triad of date.

  3. The present function is faster, but slightly less accurate (about 1 mas), than the num00a function.

Called

  • pn00b: bias/precession/nutation, IAU 2000B

Reference

  • Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, P. Kenneth Seidelmann (ed), University Science Books (1992), Section 3.222-3 (p114).
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ERFA.num06aFunction
num06a(date1, date2)

Form the matrix of nutation for a given date, IAU 2006/2000A model.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • rmatn: Nutation matrix

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The matrix operates in the sense V(true) = rmatn * V(mean), where the p-vector V(true) is with respect to the true equatorial triad of date and the p-vector V(mean) is with respect to the mean equatorial triad of date.

Called

  • obl06: mean obliquity, IAU 2006
  • nut06a: nutation, IAU 2006/2000A
  • numat: form nutation matrix

Reference

  • Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, P. Kenneth Seidelmann (ed), University Science Books (1992), Section 3.222-3 (p114).
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ERFA.numatMethod
numat(epsa, dpsi, deps)

Form the matrix of nutation.

Given

  • epsa: Mean obliquity of date (Note 1)
  • dpsi, deps: Nutation (Note 2)

Returned

  • rmatn: Nutation matrix (Note 3)

Notes

  1. The supplied mean obliquity epsa, must be consistent with the precession-nutation models from which dpsi and deps were obtained.

  2. The caller is responsible for providing the nutation components; they are in longitude and obliquity, in radians and are with respect to the equinox and ecliptic of date.

  3. The matrix operates in the sense V(true) = rmatn * V(mean), where the p-vector V(true) is with respect to the true equatorial triad of date and the p-vector V(mean) is with respect to the mean equatorial triad of date.

Called

  • ir: initialize r-matrix to identity
  • rx: rotate around X-axis
  • rz: rotate around Z-axis

Reference

  • Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, P. Kenneth Seidelmann (ed), University Science Books (1992), Section 3.222-3 (p114).
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ERFA.nut00aFunction
nut00a(date1, date2)

Nutation, IAU 2000A model (MHB2000 luni-solar and planetary nutation with free core nutation omitted).

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • dpsi, deps: Nutation, luni-solar + planetary (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The nutation components in longitude and obliquity are in radians and with respect to the equinox and ecliptic of date. The obliquity at J2000.0 is assumed to be the Lieske et al. (1977) value of 84381.448 arcsec.

    Both the luni-solar and planetary nutations are included. The latter are due to direct planetary nutations and the perturbations of the lunar and terrestrial orbits.

  3. The function computes the MHB2000 nutation series with the associated corrections for planetary nutations. It is an implementation of the nutation part of the IAU 2000A precession- nutation model, formally adopted by the IAU General Assembly in 2000, namely MHB2000 (Mathews et al. 2002), but with the free core nutation (FCN - see Note 4) omitted.

  4. The full MHB2000 model also contains contributions to the nutations in longitude and obliquity due to the free-excitation of the free-core-nutation during the period 1979-2000. These FCN terms, which are time-dependent and unpredictable, are NOT included in the present function and, if required, must be independently computed. With the FCN corrections included, the present function delivers a pole which is at current epochs accurate to a few hundred microarcseconds. The omission of FCN introduces further errors of about that size.

  5. The present function provides classical nutation. The MHB2000 algorithm, from which it is adapted, deals also with (i) the offsets between the GCRS and mean poles and (ii) the adjustments in longitude and obliquity due to the changed precession rates. These additional functions, namely frame bias and precession adjustments, are supported by the ERFA functions bi00 and pr00.

  6. The MHB2000 algorithm also provides "total" nutations, comprising the arithmetic sum of the frame bias, precession adjustments, luni-solar nutation and planetary nutation. These total nutations can be used in combination with an existing IAU 1976 precession implementation, such as pmat76, to deliver GCRS- to-true predictions of sub-mas accuracy at current dates. However, there are three shortcomings in the MHB2000 model that must be taken into account if more accurate or definitive results are required (see Wallace 2002):

    • The MHB2000 total nutations are simply arithmetic sums, yet in reality the various components are successive Euler rotations. This slight lack of rigor leads to cross terms that exceed 1 mas after a century. The rigorous procedure is to form the GCRS-to-true rotation matrix by applying the bias, precession and nutation in that order.

    • Although the precession adjustments are stated to be with respect to Lieske et al. (1977), the MHB2000 model does not specify which set of Euler angles are to be used and how the adjustments are to be applied. The most literal and straightforward procedure is to adopt the 4-rotation epsilon0, psiA, omegaA, xiA option, and to add DPSIPR to psiA and DEPSPR to both omegaA and eps_A.

    • The MHB2000 model predates the determination by Chapront et al. (2002) of a 14.6 mas displacement between the J2000.0 mean equinox and the origin of the ICRS frame. It should, however, be noted that neglecting this displacement when calculating star coordinates does not lead to a 14.6 mas change in right ascension, only a small second- order distortion in the pattern of the precession-nutation effect.

    For these reasons, the ERFA functions do not generate the "total nutations" directly, though they can of course easily be generated by calling bi00, pr00 and the present function and adding the results.

  7. The MHB2000 model contains 41 instances where the same frequency appears multiple times, of which 38 are duplicates and three are triplicates. To keep the present code close to the original MHB algorithm, this small inefficiency has not been corrected.

Called

  • fal03: mean anomaly of the Moon
  • faf03: mean argument of the latitude of the Moon
  • faom03: mean longitude of the Moon's ascending node
  • fame03: mean longitude of Mercury
  • fave03: mean longitude of Venus
  • fae03: mean longitude of Earth
  • fama03: mean longitude of Mars
  • faju03: mean longitude of Jupiter
  • fasa03: mean longitude of Saturn
  • faur03: mean longitude of Uranus
  • fapa03: general accumulated precession in longitude

References

  • Chapront, J., Chapront-Touze, M. & Francou, G. 2002, Astron.Astrophys. 387, 700

  • Lieske, J.H., Lederle, T., Fricke, W. & Morando, B. 1977, Astron.Astrophys. 58, 1-16

  • Mathews, P.M., Herring, T.A., Buffet, B.A. 2002, J.Geophys.Res. 107, B4. The MHB_2000 code itself was obtained on 9th September 2002 from ftp//maia.usno.navy.mil/conv2000/chapter5/IAU2000A.

  • Simon, J.-L., Bretagnon, P., Chapront, J., Chapront-Touze, M., Francou, G., Laskar, J. 1994, Astron.Astrophys. 282, 663-683

  • Souchay, J., Loysel, B., Kinoshita, H., Folgueira, M. 1999, Astron.Astrophys.Supp.Ser. 135, 111

  • Wallace, P.T., "Software for Implementing the IAU 2000 Resolutions", in IERS Workshop 5.1 (2002)

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ERFA.nut00bFunction
nut00b(date1, date2)

Nutation, IAU 2000B model.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • dpsi, deps: Nutation, luni-solar + planetary (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The nutation components in longitude and obliquity are in radians and with respect to the equinox and ecliptic of date. The obliquity at J2000.0 is assumed to be the Lieske et al. (1977) value of 84381.448 arcsec. (The errors that result from using this function with the IAU 2006 value of 84381.406 arcsec can be neglected.)

    The nutation model consists only of luni-solar terms, but includes also a fixed offset which compensates for certain long- period planetary terms (Note 7).

  3. This function is an implementation of the IAU 2000B abridged nutation model formally adopted by the IAU General Assembly in 2000. The function computes the MHB2000SHORT luni-solar nutation series (Luzum 2001), but without the associated corrections for the precession rate adjustments and the offset between the GCRS and J2000.0 mean poles.

  4. The full IAU 2000A (MHB2000) nutation model contains nearly 1400 terms. The IAU 2000B model (McCarthy & Luzum 2003) contains only 77 terms, plus additional simplifications, yet still delivers results of 1 mas accuracy at present epochs. This combination of accuracy and size makes the IAU 2000B abridged nutation model suitable for most practical applications.

    The function delivers a pole accurate to 1 mas from 1900 to 2100 (usually better than 1 mas, very occasionally just outside 1 mas). The full IAU 2000A model, which is implemented in the function nut00a (q.v.), delivers considerably greater accuracy at current dates; however, to realize this improved accuracy, corrections for the essentially unpredictable free-core-nutation (FCN) must also be included.

  5. The present function provides classical nutation. The MHB2000SHORT algorithm, from which it is adapted, deals also with (i) the offsets between the GCRS and mean poles and (ii) the adjustments in longitude and obliquity due to the changed precession rates. These additional functions, namely frame bias and precession adjustments, are supported by the ERFA functions bi00 and pr00.

  6. The MHB2000SHORT algorithm also provides "total" nutations, comprising the arithmetic sum of the frame bias, precession adjustments, and nutation (luni-solar + planetary). These total nutations can be used in combination with an existing IAU 1976 precession implementation, such as pmat76, to deliver GCRS- to-true predictions of mas accuracy at current epochs. However, for symmetry with the nut00a function (q.v. for the reasons), the ERFA functions do not generate the "total nutations" directly. Should they be required, they could of course easily be generated by calling bi00, pr00 and the present function and adding the results.

  7. The IAU 2000B model includes "planetary bias" terms that are fixed in size but compensate for long-period nutations. The amplitudes quoted in McCarthy & Luzum (2003), namely Dpsi = -1.5835 mas and Depsilon = +1.6339 mas, are optimized for the "total nutations" method described in Note 6. The Luzum (2001) values used in this ERFA implementation, namely -0.135 mas and +0.388 mas, are optimized for the "rigorous" method, where frame bias, precession and nutation are applied separately and in that order. During the interval 1995-2050, the ERFA implementation delivers a maximum error of 1.001 mas (not including FCN).

References

  • Lieske, J.H., Lederle, T., Fricke, W., Morando, B., "Expressions for the precession quantities based upon the IAU /1976/ system of astronomical constants", Astron.Astrophys. 58, 1-2, 1-16. (1977)

  • Luzum, B., private communication, 2001 (Fortran code MHB2000SHORT)

  • McCarthy, D.D. & Luzum, B.J., "An abridged model of the precession-nutation of the celestial pole", Cel.Mech.Dyn.Astron. 85, 37-49 (2003)

  • Simon, J.-L., Bretagnon, P., Chapront, J., Chapront-Touze, M., Francou, G., Laskar, J., Astron.Astrophys. 282, 663-683 (1994)

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ERFA.nut06aFunction
nut06a(date1, date2)

IAU 2000A nutation with adjustments to match the IAU 2006 precession.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • dpsi, deps: Nutation, luni-solar + planetary (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The nutation components in longitude and obliquity are in radians and with respect to the mean equinox and ecliptic of date, IAU 2006 precession model (Hilton et al. 2006, Capitaine et al. 2005).

  3. The function first computes the IAU 2000A nutation, then applies adjustments for (i) the consequences of the change in obliquity from the IAU 1980 ecliptic to the IAU 2006 ecliptic and (ii) the secular variation in the Earth's dynamical form factor J2.

  4. The present function provides classical nutation, complementing the IAU 2000 frame bias and IAU 2006 precession. It delivers a pole which is at current epochs accurate to a few tens of microarcseconds, apart from the free core nutation.

Called

References

  • Chapront, J., Chapront-Touze, M. & Francou, G. 2002, Astron.Astrophys. 387, 700

  • Lieske, J.H., Lederle, T., Fricke, W. & Morando, B. 1977, Astron.Astrophys. 58, 1-16

  • Mathews, P.M., Herring, T.A., Buffet, B.A. 2002, J.Geophys.Res. 107, B4. The MHB_2000 code itself was obtained on 9th September 2002 from ftp//maia.usno.navy.mil/conv2000/chapter5/IAU2000A.

  • Simon, J.-L., Bretagnon, P., Chapront, J., Chapront-Touze, M., Francou, G., Laskar, J. 1994, Astron.Astrophys. 282, 663-683

  • Souchay, J., Loysel, B., Kinoshita, H., Folgueira, M. 1999, Astron.Astrophys.Supp.Ser. 135, 111

  • Wallace, P.T., "Software for Implementing the IAU 2000 Resolutions", in IERS Workshop 5.1 (2002)

source
ERFA.nut80Function
nut80(date1, date2)

Nutation, IAU 1980 model.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • dpsi: Nutation in longitude (radians)
  • deps: Nutation in obliquity (radians)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The nutation components are with respect to the ecliptic of date.

Called

  • anpm: normalize angle into range +/- pi

Reference

  • Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, P. Kenneth Seidelmann (ed), University Science Books (1992), Section 3.222 (p111).
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ERFA.nutm80Function
nutm80(date1, date2)

Form the matrix of nutation for a given date, IAU 1980 model.

Given

  • date1, date2: TDB date (Note 1)

Returned

  • rmatn: Nutation matrix

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The matrix operates in the sense V(true) = rmatn * V(mean), where the p-vector V(true) is with respect to the true equatorial triad of date and the p-vector V(mean) is with respect to the mean equatorial triad of date.

Called

  • nut80: nutation, IAU 1980
  • obl80: mean obliquity, IAU 1980
  • numat: form nutation matrix
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ERFA.obl06Function
obl06(date1, date2)

Mean obliquity of the ecliptic, IAU 2006 precession model.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • Obliquity of the ecliptic (radians, Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The result is the angle between the ecliptic and mean equator of date date1+date2.

Reference

  • Hilton, J. et al., 2006, Celest.Mech.Dyn.Astron. 94, 351
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ERFA.obl80Function
obl80(date1, date2)

Mean obliquity of the ecliptic, IAU 1980 model.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • Obliquity of the ecliptic (radians, Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The result is the angle between the ecliptic and mean equator of date date1+date2.

Reference

  • Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, P. Kenneth Seidelmann (ed), University Science Books (1992), Expression 3.222-1 (p114).
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ERFA.p06eMethod
p06e(date1, date2)

Precession angles, IAU 2006, equinox based.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned (see Note 2)

  • eps0: epsilon_0
  • psia: psi_A
  • oma: omega_A
  • bpa: P_A
  • bqa: Q_A
  • pia: pi_A
  • bpia: Pi_A
  • epsa: obliquity epsilon_A
  • chia: chi_A
  • za: z_A
  • zetaa: zeta_A
  • thetaa: theta_A
  • pa: p_A
  • gam: F-W angle gamma_J2000
  • phi: F-W angle phi_J2000
  • psi: F-W angle psi_J2000

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. This function returns the set of equinox based angles for the Capitaine et al. "P03" precession theory, adopted by the IAU in 2006. The angles are set out in Table 1 of Hilton et al. (2006):

    AngleNameDescription
    eps0epsilon_0obliquity at J2000.0
    psiapsi_Aluni-solar precession
    omaomega_Ainclination of equator wrt J2000.0 ecliptic
    bpaP_Aecliptic pole x, J2000.0 ecliptic triad
    bqaQ_Aecliptic pole -y, J2000.0 ecliptic triad
    piapi_Aangle between moving and J2000.0 ecliptics
    bpiaPi_Alongitude of ascending node of the ecliptic
    epsaepsilon_Aobliquity of the ecliptic
    chiachi_Aplanetary precession
    zaz_Aequatorial precession: -3rd 323 Euler angle
    zetaazeta_Aequatorial precession: -1st 323 Euler angle
    thetaatheta_Aequatorial precession: 2nd 323 Euler angle
    pap_Ageneral precession
    gamgamma_J2000J2000.0 RA difference of ecliptic poles
    phiphi_J2000J2000.0 codeclination of ecliptic pole
    psipsi_J2000longitude difference of equator poles, J2000.0

    The returned values are all radians.

  3. Hilton et al. (2006) Table 1 also contains angles that depend on models distinct from the P03 precession theory itself, namely the IAU 2000A frame bias and nutation. The quoted polynomials are used in other ERFA functions:

    • xy06 contains the polynomial parts of the X and Y series.

    • s06 contains the polynomial part of the s+XY/2 series.

    • pfw06 implements the series for the Fukushima-Williams angles that are with respect to the GCRS pole (i.e. the variants that include frame bias).

  4. The IAU resolution stipulated that the choice of parameterization was left to the user, and so an IAU compliant precession implementation can be constructed using various combinations of the angles returned by the present function.

  5. The parameterization used by ERFA is the version of the Fukushima- Williams angles that refers directly to the GCRS pole. These angles may be calculated by calling the function pfw06. ERFA also supports the direct computation of the CIP GCRS X,Y by series, available by calling xy06.

  6. The agreement between the different parameterizations is at the 1 microarcsecond level in the present era.

  7. When constructing a precession formulation that refers to the GCRS pole rather than the dynamical pole, it may (depending on the choice of angles) be necessary to introduce the frame bias explicitly.

  8. It is permissible to re-use the same variable in the returned arguments. The quantities are stored in the stated order.

Reference

  • Hilton, J. et al., 2006, Celest.Mech.Dyn.Astron. 94, 351

Called

  • obl06: mean obliquity, IAU 2006
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ERFA.p2pvFunction
p2pv(p)
Deprecated

Use [p, zeros(3)] instead.

Extend a p-vector to a pv-vector by appending a zero velocity.

Given

  • p: P-vector

Returned

  • pv: Pv-vector

Called

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ERFA.p2sMethod
p2s(p)

P-vector to spherical polar coordinates.

Given

  • p: P-vector

Returned

  • theta: Longitude angle (radians)
  • phi: Latitude angle (radians)
  • r: Radial distance

Notes

  1. If P is null, zero theta, phi and r are returned.

  2. At either pole, zero theta is returned.

Called

  • c2s: p-vector to spherical
  • pm: modulus of p-vector
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ERFA.papMethod
pap(a, b)

Position-angle from two p-vectors.

Given

  • a: Direction of reference point
  • b: Direction of point whose PA is required

Returned

  • Position angle of b with respect to a (radians)

Notes

  1. The result is the position angle, in radians, of direction b with respect to direction a. It is in the range -pi to +pi. The sense is such that if b is a small distance "north" of a the position angle is approximately zero, and if b is a small distance "east" of a the position angle is approximately +pi/2.

  2. The vectors a and b need not be of unit length.

  3. Zero is returned if the two directions are the same or if either vector is null.

  4. If vector a is at a pole, the result is ill-defined.

Called

  • pn: decompose p-vector into modulus and direction
  • pm: modulus of p-vector
  • pxp: vector product of two p-vectors
  • pmp: p-vector minus p-vector
  • pdp: scalar product of two p-vectors
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ERFA.pasMethod
pas(al, ap, bl, bp)

Position-angle from spherical coordinates.

Given

  • al: Longitude of point A (e.g. RA) in radians
  • ap: Latitude of point A (e.g. Dec) in radians
  • bl: Longitude of point B
  • bp: Latitude of point B

Returned

  • Position angle of B with respect to A

Notes

  1. The result is the bearing (position angle), in radians, of point B with respect to point A. It is in the range -pi to +pi. The sense is such that if B is a small distance "east" of point A, the bearing is approximately +pi/2.

  2. Zero is returned if the two points are coincident.

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ERFA.pb06Method
pb06(date1, date2)

This function forms three Euler angles which implement general precession from epoch J2000.0, using the IAU 2006 model. Frame bias (the offset between ICRS and mean J2000.0) is included.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • bzeta: 1st rotation: radians cw around z
  • bz: 3rd rotation: radians cw around z
  • btheta: 2nd rotation: radians ccw around y

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The traditional accumulated precession angles zetaA, zA, theta_A cannot be obtained in the usual way, namely through polynomial expressions, because of the frame bias. The latter means that two of the angles undergo rapid changes near this date. They are instead the results of decomposing the precession-bias matrix obtained by using the Fukushima-Williams method, which does not suffer from the problem. The decomposition returns values which can be used in the conventional formulation and which include frame bias.

  3. The three angles are returned in the conventional order, which is not the same as the order of the corresponding Euler rotations. The precession-bias matrix is R_3(-z) x R_2(+theta) x R_3(-zeta).

  4. Should zeta_A, z_A, theta_A angles be required that do not contain frame bias, they are available by calling the ERFA function p06e.

Called

  • pmat06: PB matrix, IAU 2006
  • rz: rotate around Z-axis
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ERFA.pdpFunction
pdp(a, b)

p-vector inner (=scalar=dot) product.

Deprecated

Use LinearAlgebra.dot(a, b) instead.

Given

  • a: First p-vector
  • b: Second p-vector

Returned

  • $a \cdot b$
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ERFA.pfw06Method
pfw06(date1, date2)

Precession angles, IAU 2006 (Fukushima-Williams 4-angle formulation).

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • gamb: F-W angle gamma_bar (radians)
  • phib: F-W angle phi_bar (radians)
  • psib: F-W angle psi_bar (radians)
  • epsa: F-W angle epsilon_A (radians)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. Naming the following points:

    • e = J2000.0 ecliptic pole,
    • p = GCRS pole,
    • E = mean ecliptic pole of date,
    • and P = mean pole of date,

    the four Fukushima-Williams angles are as follows:

    • gamb = gamma_bar = epE
    • phib = phi_bar = pE
    • psib = psi_bar = pEP
    • epsa = epsilon_A = EP
  3. The matrix representing the combined effects of frame bias and precession is:

    PxB = R_1(-epsa).R_3(-psib).R_1(phib).R_3(gamb)
  4. The matrix representing the combined effects of frame bias, precession and nutation is simply:

    NxPxB = R_1(-epsa-dE).R_3(-psib-dP).R_1(phib).R_3(gamb)

    where dP and dE are the nutation components with respect to the ecliptic of date.

Reference

  • Hilton, J. et al., 2006, Celest.Mech.Dyn.Astron. 94, 351

Called

  • obl06: mean obliquity, IAU 2006
source
ERFA.plan94Method
plan94(date1, date2, np)

Approximate heliocentric position and velocity of a nominated major planet: Mercury, Venus, EMB, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus or Neptune (but not the Earth itself).

Given

  • date1: TDB date part A (Note 1)
  • date2: TDB date part B (Note 1)
  • np: Planet (1=Mercury, 2=Venus, 3=EMB, 4=Mars, 5=Jupiter, 6=Saturn, 7=Uranus, 8=Neptune)

Returned (argument)

  • Planet p,v (heliocentric, J2000.0, au,au/d)

Notes

  1. The date date1+date2 is in the TDB time scale (in practice TT can be used) and is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TDB)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience. The limited accuracy of the present algorithm is such that any of the methods is satisfactory.

  2. If an np value outside the range 1-8 is supplied, an error status (function value -1) is returned and the pv vector set to zeroes.

  3. For np=3 the result is for the Earth-Moon Barycenter. To obtain the heliocentric position and velocity of the Earth, use instead the ERFA function epv00.

  4. On successful return, the arrays p and v contain the following:

    • p: heliocentric position, au
    • v: heliocentric velocity, au/d

    The reference frame is equatorial and is with respect to the mean equator and equinox of epoch J2000.0.

  5. The algorithm is due to J.L. Simon, P. Bretagnon, J. Chapront, M. Chapront-Touze, G. Francou and J. Laskar (Bureau des Longitudes, Paris, France). From comparisons with JPL ephemeris DE102, they quote the following maximum errors over the interval 1800-2050:

    BodyL (arcsec)B (arcsec)R (km)
    Mercury41300
    Venus51800
    EMB611000
    Mars1717700
    Jupiter71576000
    Saturn8113267000
    Uranus867712000
    Neptune111253000

    Over the interval 1000-3000, they report that the accuracy is no worse than 1.5 times that over 1800-2050. Outside 1000-3000 the accuracy declines.

    Comparisons of the present function with the JPL DE200 ephemeris give the following RMS errors over the interval 1960-2025:

    Bodyposition (km)velocity (m/s)
    Mercury3340.437
    Venus10600.855
    EMB20100.815
    Mars76901.98
    Jupiter717007.70
    Saturn19900019.4
    Uranus56400016.4
    Neptune15800014.4

    Comparisons against DE200 over the interval 1800-2100 gave the following maximum absolute differences. (The results using DE406 were essentially the same.)

    BodyL (arcsec)B (arcsec)R (km)Rdot (m/s)
    Mercury715000.7
    Venus7111000.9
    EMB9113001.0
    Mars26190002.5
    Jupiter786820008.2
    Saturn871426300024.6
    Uranus86766100027.4
    Neptune11224800021.4
  6. The present ERFA re-implementation of the original Simon et al. Fortran code differs from the original in the following respects:

    • C instead of Fortran.

    • The date is supplied in two parts.

    • The result is returned only in equatorial Cartesian form; the ecliptic longitude, latitude and radius vector are not returned.

    • The result is in the J2000.0 equatorial frame, not ecliptic.

    • More is done in-line: there are fewer calls to subroutines.

    • Different error/warning status values are used.

    • A different Kepler's-equation-solver is used (avoiding use of double precision complex).

    • Polynomials in t are nested to minimize rounding errors.

    • Explicit double constants are used to avoid mixed-mode expressions.

    None of the above changes affects the result significantly.

  7. The returned status indicates the most serious condition encountered during execution of the function. Illegal np is considered the most serious, overriding failure to converge, which in turn takes precedence over the remote date warning.

Called

  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi

Reference

  • Simon, J.L, Bretagnon, P., Chapront, J., Chapront-Touze, M., Francou, G., and Laskar, J., Astron. Astrophys. 282, 663 (1994).
source
ERFA.pmFunction
pm(p)

Modulus of p-vector.

Deprecated

Use LinearAlgebra.norm instead.

Given

  • p: P-vector

Returned

  • Modulus
source
ERFA.pmat00Function
pmat00(date1, date2)

Precession matrix (including frame bias) from GCRS to a specified date, IAU 2000 model.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • rbp: Bias-precession matrix (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The matrix operates in the sense V(date) = rbp * V(GCRS), where the p-vector V(GCRS) is with respect to the Geocentric Celestial Reference System (IAU, 2000) and the p-vector V(date) is with respect to the mean equatorial triad of the given date.

Called

  • bp00: frame bias and precession matrices, IAU 2000

Reference

  • IAU: Trans. International Astronomical Union, Vol. XXIVB; Proc. 24th General Assembly, Manchester, UK. Resolutions B1.3, B1.6. (2000)
source
ERFA.pmat06Function
pmat06(date1, date2)

Precession matrix (including frame bias) from GCRS to a specified date, IAU 2006 model.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • rbp: Bias-precession matrix (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The matrix operates in the sense V(date) = rbp * V(GCRS), where the p-vector V(GCRS) is with respect to the Geocentric Celestial Reference System (IAU, 2000) and the p-vector V(date) is with respect to the mean equatorial triad of the given date.

Called

  • pfw06: bias-precession F-W angles, IAU 2006
  • fw2m: F-W angles to r-matrix

References

  • Capitaine, N. & Wallace, P.T., 2006, Astron.Astrophys. 450, 855

  • Wallace, P.T. & Capitaine, N., 2006, Astron.Astrophys. 459, 981

source
ERFA.pmat76Function
pmat76(date1, date2)

Precession matrix from J2000.0 to a specified date, IAU 1976 model.

Given

  • date1, date2: Ending date, TT (Note 1)

Returned

  • rmatp: Precession matrix, J2000.0 -> date1+date2

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The matrix operates in the sense V(date) = RMATP * V(J2000), where the p-vector V(J2000) is with respect to the mean equatorial triad of epoch J2000.0 and the p-vector V(date) is with respect to the mean equatorial triad of the given date.

  3. Though the matrix method itself is rigorous, the precession angles are expressed through canonical polynomials which are valid only for a limited time span. In addition, the IAU 1976 precession rate is known to be imperfect. The absolute accuracy of the present formulation is better than 0.1 arcsec from 1960AD to 2040AD, better than 1 arcsec from 1640AD to 2360AD, and remains below 3 arcsec for the whole of the period 500BC to 3000AD. The errors exceed 10 arcsec outside the range 1200BC to 3900AD, exceed 100 arcsec outside 4200BC to 5600AD and exceed 1000 arcsec outside 6800BC to 8200AD.

Called

  • prec76: accumulated precession angles, IAU 1976
  • ir: initialize r-matrix to identity
  • rz: rotate around Z-axis
  • ry: rotate around Y-axis
  • cr: copy r-matrix

References

  • Lieske, J.H., 1979, Astron.Astrophys. 73, 282. equations (6) & (7), p283.

  • Kaplan,G.H., 1981. USNO circular no. 163, pA2.

source
ERFA.pmpFunction
pmp(a, b)

P-vector subtraction.

Deprecated

Use a .- b instead.

Given

  • a: First p-vector
  • b: Second p-vector

Returned

  • amb: a - b
source
ERFA.pmpxMethod
pmpx(rc, dc, pr, pd, px, rv, pmt, vob)

Proper motion and parallax.

Given

  • rc, dc: ICRS RA,Dec at catalog epoch (radians)
  • pr: RA proper motion (radians/year; Note 1)
  • pd: Dec proper motion (radians/year)
  • px: Parallax (arcsec)
  • rv: Radial velocity (km/s, +ve if receding)
  • pmt: Proper motion time interval (SSB, Julian years)
  • vob: SSB to observer vector (au)

Returned

  • pco: Coordinate direction (BCRS unit vector)

Notes

  1. The proper motion in RA is dRA/dt rather than cos(Dec)*dRA/dt.

  2. The proper motion time interval is for when the starlight reaches the solar system barycenter.

  3. To avoid the need for iteration, the Roemer effect (i.e. the small annual modulation of the proper motion coming from the changing light time) is applied approximately, using the direction of the star at the catalog epoch.

References

  • 1984 Astronomical Almanac, pp B39-B41.

  • Urban, S. & Seidelmann, P. K. (eds), Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, 3rd ed., University Science Books (2013), Section 7.2.

Called

  • pdp: scalar product of two p-vectors
  • pn: decompose p-vector into modulus and direction
source
ERFA.pmsafeMethod
pmsafe(ra1, dec1, pmr1, pmd1, px1, rv1, ep1a, ep1b, ep2a, ep2b)

Star proper motion: update star catalog data for space motion, with special handling to handle the zero parallax case.

Given

  • ra1: Right ascension (radians), before
  • dec1: Declination (radians), before
  • pmr1: RA proper motion (radians/year), before
  • pmd1: Dec proper motion (radians/year), before
  • px1: Parallax (arcseconds), before
  • rv1: Radial velocity (km/s, +ve = receding), before
  • ep1a: "before" epoch, part A (Note 1)
  • ep1b: "before" epoch, part B (Note 1)
  • ep2a: "after" epoch, part A (Note 1)
  • ep2b: "after" epoch, part B (Note 1)

Returned

  • ra2: Right ascension (radians), after
  • dec2: Declination (radians), after
  • pmr2: RA proper motion (radians/year), after
  • pmd2: Dec proper motion (radians/year), after
  • px2: Parallax (arcseconds), after
  • rv2: Radial velocity (km/s, +ve = receding), after

Notes

  1. The starting and ending TDB epochs ep1a+ep1b and ep2a+ep2b are Julian Dates, apportioned in any convenient way between the two parts (A and B). For example, JD(TDB)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    epNaepNbMethod
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. In accordance with normal star-catalog conventions, the object's right ascension and declination are freed from the effects of secular aberration. The frame, which is aligned to the catalog equator and equinox, is Lorentzian and centered on the SSB.

    The proper motions are the rate of change of the right ascension and declination at the catalog epoch and are in radians per TDB Julian year.

    The parallax and radial velocity are in the same frame.

  3. Care is needed with units. The star coordinates are in radians and the proper motions in radians per Julian year, but the parallax is in arcseconds.

  4. The RA proper motion is in terms of coordinate angle, not true angle. If the catalog uses arcseconds for both RA and Dec proper motions, the RA proper motion will need to be divided by cos(Dec) before use.

  5. Straight-line motion at constant speed, in the inertial frame, is assumed.

  6. An extremely small (or zero or negative) parallax is overridden to ensure that the object is at a finite but very large distance, but not so large that the proper motion is equivalent to a large but safe speed (about 0.1c using the chosen constant). A warning status of 1 is added to the status if this action has been taken.

  7. If the space velocity is a significant fraction of c (see the constant VMAX in the function starpv), it is arbitrarily set to zero. When this action occurs, 2 is added to the status.

  8. The relativistic adjustment carried out in the starpv function involves an iterative calculation. If the process fails to converge within a set number of iterations, 4 is added to the status.

Called

  • seps: angle between two points
  • starpm: update star catalog data for space motion
source
ERFA.pnFunction
pn(p)

Convert a p-vector into modulus and unit vector.

Deprecated

Use (LinearAlgebra.norm(p), LinearAlgebra.normalize(p)) instead.

Given

  • p: P-vector

Returned

  • r: Modulus
  • u: Unit vector

Notes

  1. If p is null, the result is null. Otherwise the result is a unit vector.

  2. It is permissible to re-use the same array for any of the arguments.

Called

  • pm: modulus of p-vector
  • zp: zero p-vector
  • sxp: multiply p-vector by scalar
source
ERFA.pn00Function
pn00(date1, date2, dpsi, deps)

Precession-nutation, IAU 2000 model: a multi-purpose function, supporting classical (equinox-based) use directly and CIO-based use indirectly.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)
  • dpsi, deps: Nutation (Note 2)

Returned

  • epsa: Mean obliquity (Note 3)
  • rb: Frame bias matrix (Note 4)
  • rp: Precession matrix (Note 5)
  • rbp: Bias-precession matrix (Note 6)
  • rn: Nutation matrix (Note 7)
  • rbpn: GCRS-to-true matrix (Note 8)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The caller is responsible for providing the nutation components; they are in longitude and obliquity, in radians and are with respect to the equinox and ecliptic of date. For high-accuracy applications, free core nutation should be included as well as any other relevant corrections to the position of the CIP.

  3. The returned mean obliquity is consistent with the IAU 2000 precession-nutation models.

  4. The matrix rb transforms vectors from GCRS to J2000.0 mean equator and equinox by applying frame bias.

  5. The matrix rp transforms vectors from J2000.0 mean equator and equinox to mean equator and equinox of date by applying precession.

  6. The matrix rbp transforms vectors from GCRS to mean equator and equinox of date by applying frame bias then precession. It is the product rp x rb.

  7. The matrix rn transforms vectors from mean equator and equinox of date to true equator and equinox of date by applying the nutation (luni-solar + planetary).

  8. The matrix rbpn transforms vectors from GCRS to true equator and equinox of date. It is the product rn x rbp, applying frame bias, precession and nutation in that order.

  9. It is permissible to re-use the same array in the returned arguments. The arrays are filled in the order given.

Called

  • pr00: IAU 2000 precession adjustments
  • obl80: mean obliquity, IAU 1980
  • bp00: frame bias and precession matrices, IAU 2000
  • cr: copy r-matrix
  • numat: form nutation matrix
  • rxr: product of two r-matrices

Reference

  • Capitaine, N., Chapront, J., Lambert, S. and Wallace, P., "Expressions for the Celestial Intermediate Pole and Celestial Ephemeris Origin consistent with the IAU 2000A precession- nutation model", Astron.Astrophys. 400, 1145-1154 (2003)

  • n.b. The celestial ephemeris origin (CEO) was renamed "celestial intermediate origin" (CIO) by IAU 2006 Resolution 2.

source
ERFA.pn00aFunction
pn00a(date1, date2)

Precession-nutation, IAU 2000A model: a multi-purpose function, supporting classical (equinox-based) use directly and CIO-based use indirectly.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • dpsi, deps: Nutation (Note 2)
  • epsa: Mean obliquity (Note 3)
  • rb: Frame bias matrix (Note 4)
  • rp: Precession matrix (Note 5)
  • rbp: Bias-precession matrix (Note 6)
  • rn: Nutation matrix (Note 7)
  • rbpn: GCRS-to-true matrix (Notes 8,9)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The nutation components (luni-solar + planetary, IAU 2000A) in longitude and obliquity are in radians and with respect to the equinox and ecliptic of date. Free core nutation is omitted; for the utmost accuracy, use the pn00 function, where the nutation components are caller-specified. For faster but slightly less accurate results, use the pn00b function.

  3. The mean obliquity is consistent with the IAU 2000 precession.

  4. The matrix rb transforms vectors from GCRS to J2000.0 mean equator and equinox by applying frame bias.

  5. The matrix rp transforms vectors from J2000.0 mean equator and equinox to mean equator and equinox of date by applying precession.

  6. The matrix rbp transforms vectors from GCRS to mean equator and equinox of date by applying frame bias then precession. It is the product rp x rb.

  7. The matrix rn transforms vectors from mean equator and equinox of date to true equator and equinox of date by applying the nutation (luni-solar + planetary).

  8. The matrix rbpn transforms vectors from GCRS to true equator and equinox of date. It is the product rn x rbp, applying frame bias, precession and nutation in that order.

  9. The X,Y,Z coordinates of the IAU 2000A Celestial Intermediate Pole are elements (3,1-3) of the GCRS-to-true matrix, i.e. rbpn[3,1:3].

  10. It is permissible to re-use the same array in the returned arguments. The arrays are filled in the order given.

Called

  • nut00a: nutation, IAU 2000A
  • pn00: bias/precession/nutation results, IAU 2000

Reference

  • Capitaine, N., Chapront, J., Lambert, S. and Wallace, P., "Expressions for the Celestial Intermediate Pole and Celestial Ephemeris Origin consistent with the IAU 2000A precession- nutation model", Astron.Astrophys. 400, 1145-1154 (2003)

  • n.b. The celestial ephemeris origin (CEO) was renamed "celestial intermediate origin" (CIO) by IAU 2006 Resolution 2.

source
ERFA.pn00bFunction
pn00b(date1, date2)

Precession-nutation, IAU 2000B model: a multi-purpose function, supporting classical (equinox-based) use directly and CIO-based use indirectly.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • dpsi, deps: Nutation (Note 2)
  • epsa: Mean obliquity (Note 3)
  • rb: Frame bias matrix (Note 4)
  • rp: Precession matrix (Note 5)
  • rbp: Bias-precession matrix (Note 6)
  • rn: Nutation matrix (Note 7)
  • rbpn: GCRS-to-true matrix (Notes 8,9)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The nutation components (luni-solar + planetary, IAU 2000B) in longitude and obliquity are in radians and with respect to the equinox and ecliptic of date. For more accurate results, but at the cost of increased computation, use the pn00a function. For the utmost accuracy, use the pn00 function, where the nutation components are caller-specified.

  3. The mean obliquity is consistent with the IAU 2000 precession.

  4. The matrix rb transforms vectors from GCRS to J2000.0 mean equator and equinox by applying frame bias.

  5. The matrix rp transforms vectors from J2000.0 mean equator and equinox to mean equator and equinox of date by applying precession.

  6. The matrix rbp transforms vectors from GCRS to mean equator and equinox of date by applying frame bias then precession. It is the product rp x rb.

  7. The matrix rn transforms vectors from mean equator and equinox of date to true equator and equinox of date by applying the nutation (luni-solar + planetary).

  8. The matrix rbpn transforms vectors from GCRS to true equator and equinox of date. It is the product rn x rbp, applying frame bias, precession and nutation in that order.

  9. The X,Y,Z coordinates of the IAU 2000B Celestial Intermediate Pole are elements (3,1-3) of the GCRS-to-true matrix, i.e. rbpn[3,1:3].

  10. It is permissible to re-use the same array in the returned arguments. The arrays are filled in the stated order.

Called

  • nut00b: nutation, IAU 2000B
  • pn00: bias/precession/nutation results, IAU 2000

Reference

  • Capitaine, N., Chapront, J., Lambert, S. and Wallace, P., "Expressions for the Celestial Intermediate Pole and Celestial Ephemeris Origin consistent with the IAU 2000A precession- nutation model", Astron.Astrophys. 400, 1145-1154 (2003).

  • n.b. The celestial ephemeris origin (CEO) was renamed "celestial intermediate origin" (CIO) by IAU 2006 Resolution 2.

source
ERFA.pn06Function
pn06(date1, date2, dpsi, deps)

Precession-nutation, IAU 2006 model: a multi-purpose function, supporting classical (equinox-based) use directly and CIO-based use indirectly.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)
  • dpsi, deps: Nutation (Note 2)

Returned

  • epsa: Mean obliquity (Note 3)
  • rb: Frame bias matrix (Note 4)
  • rp: Precession matrix (Note 5)
  • rbp: Bias-precession matrix (Note 6)
  • rn: Nutation matrix (Note 7)
  • rbpn: GCRS-to-true matrix (Note 8)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The caller is responsible for providing the nutation components; they are in longitude and obliquity, in radians and are with respect to the equinox and ecliptic of date. For high-accuracy applications, free core nutation should be included as well as any other relevant corrections to the position of the CIP.

  3. The returned mean obliquity is consistent with the IAU 2006 precession.

  4. The matrix rb transforms vectors from GCRS to J2000.0 mean equator and equinox by applying frame bias.

  5. The matrix rp transforms vectors from J2000.0 mean equator and equinox to mean equator and equinox of date by applying precession.

  6. The matrix rbp transforms vectors from GCRS to mean equator and equinox of date by applying frame bias then precession. It is the product rp x rb.

  7. The matrix rn transforms vectors from mean equator and equinox of date to true equator and equinox of date by applying the nutation (luni-solar + planetary).

  8. The matrix rbpn transforms vectors from GCRS to true equator and equinox of date. It is the product rn x rbp, applying frame bias, precession and nutation in that order.

  9. The X,Y,Z coordinates of the Celestial Intermediate Pole are elements (3,1-3) of the GCRS-to-true matrix, i.e. rbpn[3,1:3].

  10. It is permissible to re-use the same array in the returned arguments. The arrays are filled in the stated order.

Called

  • pfw06: bias-precession F-W angles, IAU 2006
  • fw2m: F-W angles to r-matrix
  • cr: copy r-matrix
  • tr: transpose r-matrix
  • rxr: product of two r-matrices

References

  • Capitaine, N. & Wallace, P.T., 2006, Astron.Astrophys. 450, 855

  • Wallace, P.T. & Capitaine, N., 2006, Astron.Astrophys. 459, 981

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ERFA.pn06aFunction
pn06a(date1, date2)

Precession-nutation, IAU 2006/2000A models: a multi-purpose function, supporting classical (equinox-based) use directly and CIO-based use indirectly.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • dpsi, deps: Nutation (Note 2)
  • epsa: Mean obliquity (Note 3)
  • rb: Frame bias matrix (Note 4)
  • rp: Precession matrix (Note 5)
  • rbp: Bias-precession matrix (Note 6)
  • rn: Nutation matrix (Note 7)
  • rbpn: GCRS-to-true matrix (Notes 8,9)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The nutation components (luni-solar + planetary, IAU 2000A) in longitude and obliquity are in radians and with respect to the equinox and ecliptic of date. Free core nutation is omitted; for the utmost accuracy, use the pn06 function, where the nutation components are caller-specified.

  3. The mean obliquity is consistent with the IAU 2006 precession.

  4. The matrix rb transforms vectors from GCRS to mean J2000.0 by applying frame bias.

  5. The matrix rp transforms vectors from mean J2000.0 to mean of date by applying precession.

  6. The matrix rbp transforms vectors from GCRS to mean of date by applying frame bias then precession. It is the product rp x rb.

  7. The matrix rn transforms vectors from mean of date to true of date by applying the nutation (luni-solar + planetary).

  8. The matrix rbpn transforms vectors from GCRS to true of date (CIP/equinox). It is the product rn x rbp, applying frame bias, precession and nutation in that order.

  9. The X,Y,Z coordinates of the IAU 2006/2000A Celestial Intermediate Pole are elements (3,1-3) of the GCRS-to-true matrix, i.e. rbpn[3,1:3].

  10. It is permissible to re-use the same array in the returned arguments. The arrays are filled in the stated order.

Called

  • nut06a: nutation, IAU 2006/2000A
  • pn06: bias/precession/nutation results, IAU 2006

Reference

  • Capitaine, N. & Wallace, P.T., 2006, Astron.Astrophys. 450, 855
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ERFA.pnm00aFunction
pnm00a(date1, date2)

Form the matrix of precession-nutation for a given date (including frame bias), equinox-based, IAU 2000A model.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • rbpn: Classical NPB matrix (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The matrix operates in the sense V(date) = rbpn * V(GCRS), where the p-vector V(date) is with respect to the true equatorial triad of date date1+date2 and the p-vector V(GCRS) is with respect to the Geocentric Celestial Reference System (IAU, 2000).

  3. A faster, but slightly less accurate result (about 1 mas), can be obtained by using instead the pnm00b function.

Called

  • pn00a: bias/precession/nutation, IAU 2000A

Reference

  • IAU: Trans. International Astronomical Union, Vol. XXIVB; Proc. 24th General Assembly, Manchester, UK. Resolutions B1.3, B1.6. (2000)
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ERFA.pnm00bFunction
pnm00b(date1, date2)

Form the matrix of precession-nutation for a given date (including frame bias), equinox-based, IAU 2000B model.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • rbpn: Bias-precession-nutation matrix (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The matrix operates in the sense V(date) = rbpn * V(GCRS), where the p-vector V(date) is with respect to the true equatorial triad of date date1+date2 and the p-vector V(GCRS) is with respect to the Geocentric Celestial Reference System (IAU, 2000).

  3. The present function is faster, but slightly less accurate (about 1 mas), than the pnm00a function.

Called

  • pn00b: bias/precession/nutation, IAU 2000B

Reference

  • IAU: Trans. International Astronomical Union, Vol. XXIVB; Proc. 24th General Assembly, Manchester, UK. Resolutions B1.3, B1.6. (2000)
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ERFA.pnm06aFunction
pnm06a(date1, date2)

Form the matrix of precession-nutation for a given date (including frame bias), IAU 2006 precession and IAU 2000A nutation models.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • rnpb: Bias-precession-nutation matrix (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The matrix operates in the sense V(date) = rnpb * V(GCRS), where the p-vector V(date) is with respect to the true equatorial triad of date date1+date2 and the p-vector V(GCRS) is with respect to the Geocentric Celestial Reference System (IAU, 2000).

Called

  • pfw06: bias-precession F-W angles, IAU 2006
  • nut06a: nutation, IAU 2006/2000A
  • fw2m: F-W angles to r-matrix

Reference

  • Capitaine, N. & Wallace, P.T., 2006, Astron.Astrophys. 450, 855.
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ERFA.pnm80Function
pnm80(date1, date2)

Form the matrix of precession/nutation for a given date, IAU 1976 precession model, IAU 1980 nutation model.

Given

  • date1, date2: TDB date (Note 1)

Returned

  • rmatpn: Combined precession/nutation matrix

Notes

  1. The TDB date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TDB)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The matrix operates in the sense V(date) = rmatpn * V(J2000), where the p-vector V(date) is with respect to the true equatorial triad of date date1+date2 and the p-vector V(J2000) is with respect to the mean equatorial triad of epoch J2000.0.

Called

  • pmat76: precession matrix, IAU 1976
  • nutm80: nutation matrix, IAU 1980
  • rxr: product of two r-matrices

Reference

  • Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, P. Kenneth Seidelmann (ed), University Science Books (1992), Section 3.3 (p145).
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ERFA.pom00Method
pom00(xp, yp, sp)

Form the matrix of polar motion for a given date, IAU 2000.

Given

  • xp, yp: Coordinates of the pole (radians, Note 1)
  • sp: The TIO locator s' (radians, Note 2)

Returned

  • rpom: Polar-motion matrix (Note 3)

Notes

  1. The arguments xp and yp are the coordinates (in radians) of the Celestial Intermediate Pole with respect to the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions 2003), measured along the meridians to 0 and 90 deg west respectively.

  2. The argument sp is the TIO locator s', in radians, which positions the Terrestrial Intermediate Origin on the equator. It is obtained from polar motion observations by numerical integration, and so is in essence unpredictable. However, it is dominated by a secular drift of about 47 microarcseconds per century, and so can be taken into account by using s' = -47*t, where t is centuries since J2000.0. The function sp00 implements this approximation.

  3. The matrix operates in the sense V(TRS) = rpom * V(CIP), meaning that it is the final rotation when computing the pointing direction to a celestial source.

Called

  • ir: initialize r-matrix to identity
  • rz: rotate around Z-axis
  • ry: rotate around Y-axis
  • rx: rotate around X-axis

Reference

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)
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ERFA.pppFunction
ppp(a, b)

P-vector addition.

Deprecated

Use a .+ b instead.

Given

  • a: First p-vector
  • b: Second p-vector

Returned

  • apb: A + b
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ERFA.ppspFunction
ppsp(a, s, b)

P-vector plus scaled p-vector.

Deprecated

Use a .+ s .* b instead.

Given

  • a: First p-vector
  • s: Scalar (multiplier for b)
  • b: Second p-vector

Returned

  • apsb: a + s*b

Note

It is permissible for any of a, b and apsb to be the same array.

Called

  • sxp: multiply p-vector by scalar
  • ppp: p-vector plus p-vector
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ERFA.pr00Method
pr00(date1, date2)

Precession-rate part of the IAU 2000 precession-nutation models (part of MHB2000).

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • dpsipr, depspr: Precession corrections (Notes 2,3)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The precession adjustments are expressed as "nutation components", corrections in longitude and obliquity with respect to the J2000.0 equinox and ecliptic.

  3. Although the precession adjustments are stated to be with respect to Lieske et al. (1977), the MHB2000 model does not specify which set of Euler angles are to be used and how the adjustments are to be applied. The most literal and straightforward procedure is to adopt the 4-rotation epsilon_0, psi_A, omega_A, xi_A option, and to add dpsipr to psi_A and depspr to both omega_A and eps_A.

  4. This is an implementation of one aspect of the IAU 2000A nutation model, formally adopted by the IAU General Assembly in 2000, namely MHB2000 (Mathews et al. 2002).

References

  • Lieske, J.H., Lederle, T., Fricke, W. & Morando, B., "Expressions for the precession quantities based upon the IAU (1976) System of Astronomical Constants", Astron.Astrophys., 58, 1-16 (1977)

  • Mathews, P.M., Herring, T.A., Buffet, B.A., "Modeling of nutation and precession New nutation series for nonrigid Earth and insights into the Earth's interior", J.Geophys.Res., 107, B4, 2002. The MHB2000 code itself was obtained on 9th September 2002 from ftp://maia.usno.navy.mil/conv2000/chapter5/IAU2000A.

  • Wallace, P.T., "Software for Implementing the IAU 2000 Resolutions", in IERS Workshop 5.1 (2002).

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ERFA.prec76Method
prec76(date01, date02, date11, date12)

IAU 1976 precession model.

This function forms the three Euler angles which implement general precession between two dates, using the IAU 1976 model (as for the FK5 catalog).

Given

  • date01, date02: TDB starting date (Note 1)
  • date11, date12: TDB ending date (Note 1)

Returned

  • zeta: 1st rotation: radians cw around z
  • z: 3rd rotation: radians cw around z
  • theta: 2nd rotation: radians ccw around y

Notes

  1. The dates date01+date02 and date11+date12 are Julian Dates, apportioned in any convenient way between the arguments daten1 and daten2. For example, JD(TDB)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    daten1daten2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience. The two dates may be expressed using different methods, but at the risk of losing some resolution.

  2. The accumulated precession angles zeta, z, theta are expressed through canonical polynomials which are valid only for a limited time span. In addition, the IAU 1976 precession rate is known to be imperfect. The absolute accuracy of the present formulation is better than 0.1 arcsec from 1960AD to 2040AD, better than 1 arcsec from 1640AD to 2360AD, and remains below 3 arcsec for the whole of the period 500BC to 3000AD. The errors exceed 10 arcsec outside the range 1200BC to 3900AD, exceed 100 arcsec outside 4200BC to 5600AD and exceed 1000 arcsec outside 6800BC to 8200AD.

  3. The three angles are returned in the conventional order, which is not the same as the order of the corresponding Euler rotations. The precession matrix is R_3(-z) x R_2(+theta) x R_3(-zeta).

Reference

  • Lieske, J.H., 1979, Astron.Astrophys. 73, 282, equations (6) & (7), p283.
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ERFA.pv2pFunction
pv2p(pv)

Discard velocity component of a pv-vector.

Deprecated

Use first(pv) instead.

Given

  • pv: Pv-vector

Returned

  • p: P-vector

Called

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ERFA.pv2sMethod
pv2s(pv)

Convert position/velocity from Cartesian to spherical coordinates.

Given

  • pv: Pv-vector

Returned

  • theta: Longitude angle (radians)
  • phi: Latitude angle (radians)
  • r: Radial distance
  • td: Rate of change of theta
  • pd: Rate of change of phi
  • rd: Rate of change of r

Notes

  1. If the position part of pv is null, theta, phi, td and pd are indeterminate. This is handled by extrapolating the position through unit time by using the velocity part of pv. This moves the origin without changing the direction of the velocity component. If the position and velocity components of pv are both null, zeroes are returned for all six results.

  2. If the position is a pole, theta, td and pd are indeterminate. In such cases zeroes are returned for all three.

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ERFA.pvdpvMethod
pvdpv(a, b)

Inner (=scalar=dot) product of two pv-vectors.

Given

  • a: First pv-vector
  • b: Second pv-vector

Returned

  • adb: $a \cdot b$ (see note)

Note

If the position and velocity components of the two pv-vectors are ( ap, av ) and ( bp, bv ), the result, a . b, is the pair of numbers ( ap . bp , ap . bv + av . bp ). The two numbers are the dot-product of the two p-vectors and its derivative.

Called

  • pdp: scalar product of two p-vectors
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ERFA.pvmFunction
pvm(pv)

Modulus of pv-vector.

Deprecated

Use LinearAlgebra.norm.(pv) instead.

Given

  • pv: Pv-vector

Returned

  • r: Modulus of position component
  • s: Modulus of velocity component

Called

  • pm: modulus of p-vector
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ERFA.pvmpvFunction
pvmpv(a, b)

Subtract one pv-vector from another.

Deprecated

Use a .- b instead.

Given

  • a: First pv-vector
  • b: Second pv-vector

Returned

  • amb: A - b

Note

It is permissible to re-use the same array for any of the arguments.

Called

  • pmp: p-vector minus p-vector
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ERFA.pvppvFunction
pvppv(a, b)

Add one pv-vector to another.

Deprecated

Use a .+ b instead.

Given

  • a: First pv-vector
  • b: Second pv-vector

Returned

  • apb: A + b

Note

It is permissible to re-use the same array for any of the arguments.

Called

  • ppp: p-vector plus p-vector
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ERFA.pvstarMethod
pvstar(pv)

Convert star position+velocity vector to catalog coordinates.

Given (Note 1)

  • pv: pv-vector (au, au/day)

Returned (Note 2)

  • ra: Right ascension (radians)
  • dec: Declination (radians)
  • pmr: RA proper motion (radians/year)
  • pmd: Dec proper motion (radians/year)
  • px: Parallax (arcsec)
  • rv: Radial velocity (km/s, positive = receding)

Notes

  1. The specified pv-vector is the coordinate direction (and its rate of change) for the date at which the light leaving the star reached the solar-system barycenter.

  2. The star data returned by this function are "observables" for an imaginary observer at the solar-system barycenter. Proper motion and radial velocity are, strictly, in terms of barycentric coordinate time, TCB. For most practical applications, it is permissible to neglect the distinction between TCB and ordinary "proper" time on Earth (TT/TAI). The result will, as a rule, be limited by the intrinsic accuracy of the proper-motion and radial-velocity data; moreover, the supplied pv-vector is likely to be merely an intermediate result (for example generated by the function starpv), so that a change of time unit will cancel out overall.

    In accordance with normal star-catalog conventions, the object's right ascension and declination are freed from the effects of secular aberration. The frame, which is aligned to the catalog equator and equinox, is Lorentzian and centered on the SSB.

    Summarizing, the specified pv-vector is for most stars almost identical to the result of applying the standard geometrical "space motion" transformation to the catalog data. The differences, which are the subject of the Stumpff paper cited below, are:

    • In stars with significant radial velocity and proper motion, the constantly changing light-time distorts the apparent proper motion. Note that this is a classical, not a relativistic, effect.

    • The transformation complies with special relativity.

  3. Care is needed with units. The star coordinates are in radians and the proper motions in radians per Julian year, but the parallax is in arcseconds; the radial velocity is in km/s, but the pv-vector result is in au and au/day.

  4. The proper motions are the rate of change of the right ascension and declination at the catalog epoch and are in radians per Julian year. The RA proper motion is in terms of coordinate angle, not true angle, and will thus be numerically larger at high declinations.

  5. Straight-line motion at constant speed in the inertial frame is assumed. If the speed is greater than or equal to the speed of light, the function aborts with an error status.

  6. The inverse transformation is performed by the function starpv.

Called

  • pn: decompose p-vector into modulus and direction
  • pdp: scalar product of two p-vectors
  • sxp: multiply p-vector by scalar
  • pmp: p-vector minus p-vector
  • pm: modulus of p-vector
  • ppp: p-vector plus p-vector
  • pv2s: pv-vector to spherical
  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi

Reference

  • Stumpff, P., 1985, Astron.Astrophys. 144, 232-240.
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ERFA.pvtobMethod
pvtob(elong, phi, height, xp, yp, sp, theta)

Position and velocity of a terrestrial observing station.

Given

  • elong: Longitude (radians, east +ve, Note 1)
  • phi: Latitude (geodetic, radians, Note 1)
  • hm: Height above ref. ellipsoid (geodetic, m)
  • xp, yp: Coordinates of the pole (radians, Note 2)
  • sp: The TIO locator s' (radians, Note 2)
  • theta: Earth rotation angle (radians, Note 3)

Returned

  • pv: Position/velocity vector (m, m/s, CIRS)

Notes

  1. The terrestrial coordinates are with respect to the WGS84 reference ellipsoid.

  2. xp and yp are the coordinates (in radians) of the Celestial Intermediate Pole with respect to the International Terrestrial Reference System (see IERS Conventions), measured along the meridians 0 and 90 deg west respectively. sp is the TIO locator s', in radians, which positions the Terrestrial Intermediate Origin on the equator. For many applications, xp, yp and (especially) sp can be set to zero.

  3. If theta is Greenwich apparent sidereal time instead of Earth rotation angle, the result is with respect to the true equator and equinox of date, i.e. with the x-axis at the equinox rather than the celestial intermediate origin.

  4. The velocity units are meters per UT1 second, not per SI second. This is unlikely to have any practical consequences in the modern era.

  5. No validation is performed on the arguments. Error cases that could lead to arithmetic exceptions are trapped by the gd2gc function, and the result set to zeros.

References

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

  • Urban, S. & Seidelmann, P. K. (eds), Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, 3rd ed., University Science Books (2013), Section 7.4.3.3.

Called

  • gd2gc: geodetic to geocentric transformation
  • pom00: polar motion matrix
  • trxp: product of transpose of r-matrix and p-vector
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ERFA.pvuMethod
pvu(dt, pv)

Update a pv-vector.

Given

  • dt: Time interval
  • pv: Pv-vector

Returned

  • upv: P updated, v unchanged

Notes

  1. "Update" means "refer the position component of the vector to a new date dt time units from the existing date".

  2. The time units of dt must match those of the velocity.

  3. It is permissible for pv and upv to be the same array.

Called

  • ppsp: p-vector plus scaled p-vector
  • erfa_cp: copy p-vector
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ERFA.pvupMethod
pvup(dt, pv)

Update a pv-vector, discarding the velocity component.

Given

  • dt: Time interval
  • pv: Pv-vector

Returned

  • p: P-vector

Notes

  1. "Update" means "refer the position component of the vector to a new date dt time units from the existing date".

  2. The time units of dt must match those of the velocity.

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ERFA.pvxpvMethod
pvxpv(a, b)

Outer (=vector=cross) product of two pv-vectors.

Given

  • a: First pv-vector
  • b: Second pv-vector

Returned

  • axb: A x b

Notes

  1. If the position and velocity components of the two pv-vectors are ( ap, av ) and ( bp, bv ), the result, a x b, is the pair of vectors ( ap x bp, ap x bv + av x bp ). The two vectors are the cross-product of the two p-vectors and its derivative.

  2. It is permissible to re-use the same array for any of the arguments.

Called

  • cpv: copy pv-vector
  • pxp: vector product of two p-vectors
  • ppp: p-vector plus p-vector
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ERFA.pxpFunction
pxp(a, b)

p-vector outer (=vector=cross) product.

Deprecated

Use LinearAlgebra.cross instead.

Given

  • a: First p-vector
  • b: Second p-vector

Returned

  • axb: A x b
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ERFA.refcoMethod
refco(phpa, tc, rh, wl)

Determine the constants A and B in the atmospheric refraction model dZ = A tan Z + B tan^3 Z.

Z is the "observed" zenith distance (i.e. affected by refraction) and dZ is what to add to Z to give the "topocentric" (i.e. in vacuo) zenith distance.

Given

  • phpa: Pressure at the observer (hPa = millibar)
  • tc: Ambient temperature at the observer (deg C)
  • rh: Relative humidity at the observer (range 0-1)
  • wl: Wavelength (micrometers)

Returned

  • refa: tan Z coefficient (radians)
  • refb: tan^3 Z coefficient (radians)

Notes

  1. The model balances speed and accuracy to give good results in applications where performance at low altitudes is not paramount. Performance is maintained across a range of conditions, and applies to both optical/IR and radio.

  2. The model omits the effects of (i) height above sea level (apart from the reduced pressure itself), (ii) latitude (i.e. the flattening of the Earth), (iii) variations in tropospheric lapse rate and (iv) dispersive effects in the radio.

    The model was tested using the following range of conditions:

    • lapse rates 0.0055, 0.0065, 0.0075 deg/meter
    • latitudes 0, 25, 50, 75 degrees
    • heights 0, 2500, 5000 meters ASL
    • pressures mean for height -10% to +5% in steps of 5%
    • temperatures -10 deg to +20 deg with respect to 280 deg at SL
    • relative humidity 0, 0.5, 1
    • wavelengths 0.4, 0.6, ... 2 micron, + radio
    • zenith distances 15, 45, 75 degrees

    The accuracy with respect to raytracing through a model atmosphere was as follows:

    worstRMS
    optical/IR62 mas8 mas
    radio319 mas49 mas

    For this particular set of conditions:

    • lapse rate 0.0065 K/meter
    • latitude 50 degrees
    • sea level
    • pressure 1005 mb
    • temperature 280.15 K
    • humidity 80%
    • wavelength 5740 Angstroms

    the results were as follows:

    ZDraytracerefcoSaastamoinen
    1010.2710.2710.27
    2021.1921.2021.19
    3033.6133.6133.60
    4048.8248.8348.81
    4558.1658.1858.16
    5069.2869.3069.27
    5582.9782.9982.95
    60100.51100.54100.50
    65124.23124.26124.20
    70158.63158.68158.61
    72177.32177.37177.31
    74200.35200.38200.32
    76229.45229.43229.42
    78267.44267.29267.41
    80319.13318.55319.10
    degarcsecarcsecarcsec

    The values for Saastamoinen's formula (which includes terms up to tan^5) are taken from Hohenkerk and Sinclair (1985).

  3. A wl value in the range 0-100 selects the optical/IR case and is wavelength in micrometers. Any value outside this range selects the radio case.

  4. Outlandish input parameters are silently limited to mathematically safe values. Zero pressure is permissible, and causes zeroes to be returned.

  5. The algorithm draws on several sources, as follows:

    • The formula for the saturation vapour pressure of water as a function of temperature and temperature is taken from Equations (A4.5-A4.7) of Gill (1982).

    • The formula for the water vapour pressure, given the saturation pressure and the relative humidity, is from Crane (1976), Equation (2.5.5).

    • The refractivity of air is a function of temperature, total pressure, water-vapour pressure and, in the case of optical/IR, wavelength. The formulae for the two cases are developed from Hohenkerk & Sinclair (1985) and Rueger (2002).

    • The formula for beta, the ratio of the scale height of the atmosphere to the geocentric distance of the observer, is an adaption of Equation (9) from Stone (1996). The adaptations, arrived at empirically, consist of (i) a small adjustment to the coefficient and (ii) a humidity term for the radio case only.

    • The formulae for the refraction constants as a function of n-1 and beta are from Green (1987), Equation (4.31).

References

  • Crane, R.K., Meeks, M.L. (ed), "Refraction Effects in the Neutral Atmosphere", Methods of Experimental Physics: Astrophysics 12B, Academic Press, 1976.

  • Gill, Adrian E., "Atmosphere-Ocean Dynamics", Academic Press, 1982.

  • Green, R.M., "Spherical Astronomy", Cambridge University Press, 1987.

  • Hohenkerk, C.Y., & Sinclair, A.T., NAO Technical Note No. 63, 1985.

  • Rueger, J.M., "Refractive Index Formulae for Electronic Distance Measurement with Radio and Millimetre Waves", in Unisurv Report S-68, School of Surveying and Spatial Information Systems, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia, 2002.

  • Stone, Ronald C., P.A.S.P. 108, 1051-1058, 1996.

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ERFA.rm2vMethod
rm2v(r)

Express an r-matrix as an r-vector.

Given

  • r: Rotation matrix

Returned

  • w: Rotation vector (Note 1)

Notes

  1. A rotation matrix describes a rotation through some angle about some arbitrary axis called the Euler axis. The "rotation vector" returned by this function has the same direction as the Euler axis, and its magnitude is the angle in radians. (The magnitude and direction can be separated by means of the function pn.)

  2. If r is null, so is the result. If r is not a rotation matrix the result is undefined; r must be proper (i.e. have a positive determinant) and real orthogonal (inverse = transpose).

  3. The reference frame rotates clockwise as seen looking along the rotation vector from the origin.

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ERFA.rv2mMethod
rv2m(w)

Form the r-matrix corresponding to a given r-vector.

Given

  • w: Rotation vector (Note 1)

Returned

  • r: Rotation matrix

Notes

  1. A rotation matrix describes a rotation through some angle about some arbitrary axis called the Euler axis. The "rotation vector" supplied to This function has the same direction as the Euler axis, and its magnitude is the angle in radians.

  2. If w is null, the unit matrix is returned.

  3. The reference frame rotates clockwise as seen looking along the rotation vector from the origin.

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ERFA.rxFunction
rx(phi, r)

Rotate an r-matrix about the x-axis.

Given

  • phi: Angle (radians)

Given and returned

  • r: r-matrix, rotated

Notes

  1. Calling this function with positive phi incorporates in the supplied r-matrix r an additional rotation, about the x-axis, anticlockwise as seen looking towards the origin from positive x.

  2. The additional rotation can be represented by this matrix:

    (  1        0            0      )
    (                               )
    (  0   + cos(phi)   + sin(phi)  )
    (                               )
    (  0   - sin(phi)   + cos(phi)  )
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ERFA.rxpFunction
rxp(r, p)

Multiply a p-vector by an r-matrix.

Deprecated

Use r * p instead.

Given

  • r: R-matrix
  • p: P-vector

Returned

  • rp: r * p

Note

It is permissible for p and rp to be the same array.

Called

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ERFA.rxpvFunction
rxpv(r, pv)

Multiply a pv-vector by an r-matrix.

Deprecated

Use [r * pv[1], r * pv[2]] instead.

Given

  • r: R-matrix
  • pv: Pv-vector

Returned

  • rpv: R * pv

Note

It is permissible for pv and rpv to be the same array.

Called

  • rxp: product of r-matrix and p-vector
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ERFA.rxrFunction
rxr(a, b)

Multiply two r-matrices.

Deprecated

Use a * b instead.

Given

  • a: First r-matrix
  • b: Second r-matrix

Returned

  • atb: a * b

Note

It is permissible to re-use the same array for any of the arguments.

Called

  • cr: copy r-matrix
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ERFA.ryFunction
ry(phi, r)

Rotate an r-matrix about the y-axis.

Given

  • theta: Angle (radians)

Given and returned

  • r: r-matrix, rotated

Notes

  1. Calling this function with positive theta incorporates in the supplied r-matrix r an additional rotation, about the y-axis, anticlockwise as seen looking towards the origin from positive y.

  2. The additional rotation can be represented by this matrix:

    (  + cos(theta)     0      - sin(theta)  )
    (                                        )
    (       0           1           0        )
    (                                        )
    (  + sin(theta)     0      + cos(theta)  )
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ERFA.rzFunction
rz(phi, r)

Rotate an r-matrix about the z-axis.

Given

  • psi: Angle (radians)

Given and returned

  • r: r-matrix, rotated

Notes

  1. Calling this function with positive psi incorporates in the supplied r-matrix r an additional rotation, about the z-axis, anticlockwise as seen looking towards the origin from positive z.

  2. The additional rotation can be represented by this matrix:

    (  + cos(psi)   + sin(psi)     0  )
    (                                 )
    (  - sin(psi)   + cos(psi)     0  )
    (                                 )
    (       0            0         1  )
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ERFA.s00Function
s00(date1, date2, x, y)

The CIO locator s, positioning the Celestial Intermediate Origin on the equator of the Celestial Intermediate Pole, given the CIP's X,Y coordinates. Compatible with IAU 2000A precession-nutation.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)
  • x, y: CIP coordinates (Note 3)

Returned

  • The CIO locator s in radians (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The CIO locator s is the difference between the right ascensions of the same point in two systems: the two systems are the GCRS and the CIP,CIO, and the point is the ascending node of the CIP equator. The quantity s remains below 0.1 arcsecond throughout 1900-2100.

  3. The series used to compute s is in fact for s+XY/2, where X and Y are the x and y components of the CIP unit vector; this series is more compact than a direct series for s would be. This function requires X,Y to be supplied by the caller, who is responsible for providing values that are consistent with the supplied date.

  4. The model is consistent with the IAU 2000A precession-nutation.

Called

  • fal03: mean anomaly of the Moon
  • falp03: mean anomaly of the Sun
  • faf03: mean argument of the latitude of the Moon
  • fad03: mean elongation of the Moon from the Sun
  • faom03: mean longitude of the Moon's ascending node
  • fave03: mean longitude of Venus
  • fae03: mean longitude of Earth
  • fapa03: general accumulated precession in longitude

References

  • Capitaine, N., Chapront, J., Lambert, S. and Wallace, P., "Expressions for the Celestial Intermediate Pole and Celestial Ephemeris Origin consistent with the IAU 2000A precession- nutation model", Astron.Astrophys. 400, 1145-1154 (2003)

  • n.b. The celestial ephemeris origin (CEO) was renamed "celestial intermediate origin" (CIO) by IAU 2006 Resolution 2.

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

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ERFA.s00aFunction
s00a(date1, date2)

The CIO locator s, positioning the Celestial Intermediate Origin on the equator of the Celestial Intermediate Pole, using the IAU 2000A precession-nutation model.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • The CIO locator s in radians (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The CIO locator s is the difference between the right ascensions of the same point in two systems. The two systems are the GCRS and the CIP,CIO, and the point is the ascending node of the CIP equator. The CIO locator s remains a small fraction of 1 arcsecond throughout 1900-2100.

  3. The series used to compute s is in fact for s+XY/2, where X and Y are the x and y components of the CIP unit vector; this series is more compact than a direct series for s would be. The present function uses the full IAU 2000A nutation model when predicting the CIP position. Faster results, with no significant loss of accuracy, can be obtained via the function s00b, which uses instead the IAU 2000B truncated model.

Called

  • pnm00a: classical NPB matrix, IAU 2000A
  • bpn2xy: extract CIP X,Y from the BPN matrix
  • s00: the CIO locator s, given X,Y, IAU 2000A

References

  • Capitaine, N., Chapront, J., Lambert, S. and Wallace, P., "Expressions for the Celestial Intermediate Pole and Celestial Ephemeris Origin consistent with the IAU 2000A precession- nutation model", Astron.Astrophys. 400, 1145-1154 (2003)

  • n.b. The celestial ephemeris origin (CEO) was renamed "celestial intermediate origin" (CIO) by IAU 2006 Resolution 2.

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

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ERFA.s00bFunction
s00b(date1, date2)

The CIO locator s, positioning the Celestial Intermediate Origin on the equator of the Celestial Intermediate Pole, using the IAU 2000B precession-nutation model.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • The CIO locator s in radians (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The CIO locator s is the difference between the right ascensions of the same point in two systems. The two systems are the GCRS and the CIP,CIO, and the point is the ascending node of the CIP equator. The CIO locator s remains a small fraction of 1 arcsecond throughout 1900-2100.

  3. The series used to compute s is in fact for s+XY/2, where X and Y are the x and y components of the CIP unit vector; this series is more compact than a direct series for s would be. The present function uses the IAU 2000B truncated nutation model when predicting the CIP position. The function s00a uses instead the full IAU 2000A model, but with no significant increase in accuracy and at some cost in speed.

Called

  • pnm00b: classical NPB matrix, IAU 2000B
  • bpn2xy: extract CIP X,Y from the BPN matrix
  • s00: the CIO locator s, given X,Y, IAU 2000A

References

  • Capitaine, N., Chapront, J., Lambert, S. and Wallace, P., "Expressions for the Celestial Intermediate Pole and Celestial Ephemeris Origin consistent with the IAU 2000A precession- nutation model", Astron.Astrophys. 400, 1145-1154 (2003)

  • n.b. The celestial ephemeris origin (CEO) was renamed "celestial intermediate origin" (CIO) by IAU 2006 Resolution 2.

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

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ERFA.s06Function
s06(date1, date2, x, y)

The CIO locator s, positioning the Celestial Intermediate Origin on the equator of the Celestial Intermediate Pole, given the CIP's X,Y coordinates. Compatible with IAU 2006/2000A precession-nutation.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)
  • x, y: CIP coordinates (Note 3)

Returned

  • The CIO locator s in radians (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The CIO locator s is the difference between the right ascensions of the same point in two systems: the two systems are the GCRS and the CIP,CIO, and the point is the ascending node of the CIP equator. The quantity s remains below 0.1 arcsecond throughout 1900-2100.

  3. The series used to compute s is in fact for s+XY/2, where X and Y are the x and y components of the CIP unit vector; this series is more compact than a direct series for s would be. This function requires X,Y to be supplied by the caller, who is responsible for providing values that are consistent with the supplied date.

  4. The model is consistent with the "P03" precession (Capitaine et al. 2003), adopted by IAU 2006 Resolution 1, 2006, and the IAU 2000A nutation (with P03 adjustments).

Called

  • fal03: mean anomaly of the Moon
  • falp03: mean anomaly of the Sun
  • faf03: mean argument of the latitude of the Moon
  • fad03: mean elongation of the Moon from the Sun
  • faom03: mean longitude of the Moon's ascending node
  • fave03: mean longitude of Venus
  • fae03: mean longitude of Earth
  • fapa03: general accumulated precession in longitude

References

  • Capitaine, N., Wallace, P.T. & Chapront, J., 2003, Astron. Astrophys. 432, 355

  • McCarthy, D.D., Petit, G. (eds.) 2004, IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG

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ERFA.s06aFunction
s06a(date1, date2)

The CIO locator s, positioning the Celestial Intermediate Origin on the equator of the Celestial Intermediate Pole, using the IAU 2006 precession and IAU 2000A nutation models.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • The CIO locator s in radians (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The CIO locator s is the difference between the right ascensions of the same point in two systems. The two systems are the GCRS and the CIP,CIO, and the point is the ascending node of the CIP equator. The CIO locator s remains a small fraction of 1 arcsecond throughout 1900-2100.

  3. The series used to compute s is in fact for s+XY/2, where X and Y are the x and y components of the CIP unit vector; this series is more compact than a direct series for s would be. The present function uses the full IAU 2000A nutation model when predicting the CIP position.

Called

  • pnm06a: classical NPB matrix, IAU 2006/2000A
  • bpn2xy: extract CIP X,Y coordinates from NPB matrix
  • s06: the CIO locator s, given X,Y, IAU 2006

References

  • Capitaine, N., Chapront, J., Lambert, S. and Wallace, P., "Expressions for the Celestial Intermediate Pole and Celestial Ephemeris Origin consistent with the IAU 2000A precession- nutation model", Astron.Astrophys. 400, 1145-1154 (2003)

  • n.b. The celestial ephemeris origin (CEO) was renamed "celestial intermediate origin" (CIO) by IAU 2006 Resolution 2.

  • Capitaine, N. & Wallace, P.T., 2006, Astron.Astrophys. 450, 855

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), 2004, IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG

  • Wallace, P.T. & Capitaine, N., 2006, Astron.Astrophys. 459, 981

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ERFA.s2cMethod
s2c(theta, phi)

Convert spherical coordinates to Cartesian.

Given

  • theta: Longitude angle (radians)
  • phi: Latitude angle (radians)

Returned

  • c: Direction cosines
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ERFA.s2pMethod
s2p(theta, phi, r)

Convert spherical polar coordinates to p-vector.

Given

  • theta: Longitude angle (radians)
  • phi: Latitude angle (radians)
  • r: Radial distance

Returned

  • p: Cartesian coordinates

Called

  • s2c: spherical coordinates to unit vector
  • sxp: multiply p-vector by scalar
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ERFA.s2pvMethod
s2pv(theta, phi, r, td, pd, rd)

Convert position/velocity from spherical to Cartesian coordinates.

Given

  • theta: Longitude angle (radians)
  • phi: Latitude angle (radians)
  • r: Radial distance
  • td: Rate of change of theta
  • pd: Rate of change of phi
  • rd: Rate of change of r

Returned

  • pv: Pv-vector
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ERFA.s2xpvFunction
s2xpv(s1, s2, pv)

Multiply a pv-vector by two scalars.

Deprecated

Use [s1 .* pv[1], s2 .* pv[2]] instead.

Given

  • s1: Scalar to multiply position component by
  • s2: Scalar to multiply velocity component by
  • pv: Pv-vector

Returned

  • spv: Pv-vector: p scaled by s1, v scaled by s2

Note

It is permissible for pv and spv to be the same array.

Called

  • sxp: multiply p-vector by scalar
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ERFA.seppMethod
sepp(a, b)

Angular separation between two p-vectors.

Given

  • a: First p-vector (not necessarily unit length)
  • b: Second p-vector (not necessarily unit length)

Returned

  • Angular separation (radians, always positive)

Notes

  1. If either vector is null, a zero result is returned.

  2. The angular separation is most simply formulated in terms of scalar product. However, this gives poor accuracy for angles near zero and pi. The present algorithm uses both cross product and dot product, to deliver full accuracy whatever the size of the angle.

Called

  • pxp: vector product of two p-vectors
  • pm: modulus of p-vector
  • pdp: scalar product of two p-vectors
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ERFA.sepsMethod
seps(al, ap, bl, bp)

Angular separation between two sets of spherical coordinates.

Given

  • al: First longitude (radians)
  • ap: First latitude (radians)
  • bl: Second longitude (radians)
  • bp: Second latitude (radians)

Returned

  • Angular separation (radians)

Called

  • s2c: spherical coordinates to unit vector
  • sepp: angular separation between two p-vectors
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ERFA.sp00Function
sp00(date1, date2)

The TIO locator s', positioning the Terrestrial Intermediate Origin on the equator of the Celestial Intermediate Pole.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • The TIO locator s' in radians (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The TIO locator s' is obtained from polar motion observations by numerical integration, and so is in essence unpredictable. However, it is dominated by a secular drift of about 47 microarcseconds per century, which is the approximation evaluated by the present function.

Reference

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)
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ERFA.starpmMethod
starpm(ra1, dec1, pmr1, pmd1, px1, rv1, ep1a, ep1b, ep2a, ep2b)

Star proper motion: update star catalog data for space motion.

Given

  • ra1: Right ascension (radians), before
  • dec1: Declination (radians), before
  • pmr1: RA proper motion (radians/year), before
  • pmd1: Dec proper motion (radians/year), before
  • px1: Parallax (arcseconds), before
  • rv1: Radial velocity (km/s, +ve = receding), before
  • ep1a: "before" epoch, part A (Note 1)
  • ep1b: "before" epoch, part B (Note 1)
  • ep2a: "after" epoch, part A (Note 1)
  • ep2b: "after" epoch, part B (Note 1)

Returned

  • ra2: Right ascension (radians), after
  • dec2: Declination (radians), after
  • pmr2: RA proper motion (radians/year), after
  • pmd2: Dec proper motion (radians/year), after
  • px2: Parallax (arcseconds), after
  • rv2: Radial velocity (km/s, +ve = receding), after

Notes

  1. The starting and ending TDB dates ep1a+ep1b and ep2a+ep2b are Julian Dates, apportioned in any convenient way between the two parts (A and B). For example, JD(TDB)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    epnaepnbMethod
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. In accordance with normal star-catalog conventions, the object's right ascension and declination are freed from the effects of secular aberration. The frame, which is aligned to the catalog equator and equinox, is Lorentzian and centered on the SSB.

    The proper motions are the rate of change of the right ascension and declination at the catalog epoch and are in radians per TDB Julian year.

    The parallax and radial velocity are in the same frame.

  3. Care is needed with units. The star coordinates are in radians and the proper motions in radians per Julian year, but the parallax is in arcseconds.

  4. The RA proper motion is in terms of coordinate angle, not true angle. If the catalog uses arcseconds for both RA and Dec proper motions, the RA proper motion will need to be divided by cos(Dec) before use.

  5. Straight-line motion at constant speed, in the inertial frame, is assumed.

  6. An extremely small (or zero or negative) parallax is interpreted to mean that the object is on the "celestial sphere", the radius of which is an arbitrary (large) value (see the starpv function for the value used). When the distance is overridden in this way, the status, initially zero, has 1 added to it.

  7. If the space velocity is a significant fraction of c (see the constant VMAX in the function starpv), it is arbitrarily set to zero. When this action occurs, 2 is added to the status.

  8. The relativistic adjustment carried out in the starpv function involves an iterative calculation. If the process fails to converge within a set number of iterations, 4 is added to the status.

Called

  • starpv: star catalog data to space motion pv-vector
  • pvu: update a pv-vector
  • pdp: scalar product of two p-vectors
  • pvstar: space motion pv-vector to star catalog data
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ERFA.starpvMethod
starpv(ra, dec, pmr, pmd, px, rv)

Convert star catalog coordinates to position+velocity vector.

Given (Note 1)

  • ra: Right ascension (radians)
  • dec: Declination (radians)
  • pmr: RA proper motion (radians/year)
  • pmd: Dec proper motion (radians/year)
  • px: Parallax (arcseconds)
  • rv: Radial velocity (km/s, positive = receding)

Returned (Note 2)

  • pv: pv-vector (au, au/day)

Notes

  1. The star data accepted by this function are "observables" for an imaginary observer at the solar-system barycenter. Proper motion and radial velocity are, strictly, in terms of barycentric coordinate time, TCB. For most practical applications, it is permissible to neglect the distinction between TCB and ordinary "proper" time on Earth (TT/TAI). The result will, as a rule, be limited by the intrinsic accuracy of the proper-motion and radial-velocity data; moreover, the pv-vector is likely to be merely an intermediate result, so that a change of time unit would cancel out overall.

    In accordance with normal star-catalog conventions, the object's right ascension and declination are freed from the effects of secular aberration. The frame, which is aligned to the catalog equator and equinox, is Lorentzian and centered on the SSB.

  2. The resulting position and velocity pv-vector is with respect to the same frame and, like the catalog coordinates, is freed from the effects of secular aberration. Should the "coordinate direction", where the object was located at the catalog epoch, be required, it may be obtained by calculating the magnitude of the position vector pv[0][0-2] dividing by the speed of light in au/day to give the light-time, and then multiplying the space velocity pv[1][0-2] by this light-time and adding the result to pv[0][0-2].

    Summarizing, the pv-vector returned is for most stars almost identical to the result of applying the standard geometrical "space motion" transformation. The differences, which are the subject of the Stumpff paper referenced below, are:

    • In stars with significant radial velocity and proper motion, the constantly changing light-time distorts the apparent proper motion. Note that this is a classical, not a relativistic, effect.

    • The transformation complies with special relativity.

  3. Care is needed with units. The star coordinates are in radians and the proper motions in radians per Julian year, but the parallax is in arcseconds; the radial velocity is in km/s, but the pv-vector result is in au and au/day.

  4. The RA proper motion is in terms of coordinate angle, not true angle. If the catalog uses arcseconds for both RA and Dec proper motions, the RA proper motion will need to be divided by cos(Dec) before use.

  5. Straight-line motion at constant speed, in the inertial frame, is assumed.

  6. An extremely small (or zero or negative) parallax is interpreted to mean that the object is on the "celestial sphere", the radius of which is an arbitrary (large) value (see the constant PXMIN). When the distance is overridden in this way, the status, initially zero, has 1 added to it.

  7. If the space velocity is a significant fraction of c (see the constant VMAX), it is arbitrarily set to zero. When this action occurs, 2 is added to the status.

  8. The relativistic adjustment involves an iterative calculation. If the process fails to converge within a set number (IMAX) of iterations, 4 is added to the status.

  9. The inverse transformation is performed by the function pvstar.

Called

  • s2pv: spherical coordinates to pv-vector
  • pm: modulus of p-vector
  • zp: zero p-vector
  • pn: decompose p-vector into modulus and direction
  • pdp: scalar product of two p-vectors
  • sxp: multiply p-vector by scalar
  • pmp: p-vector minus p-vector
  • ppp: p-vector plus p-vector

Reference

  • Stumpff, P., 1985, Astron.Astrophys. 144, 232-240.
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ERFA.sxpFunction
sxp(s, p)

Multiply a p-vector by a scalar.

Deprecated

Use s .* p instead.

Given

  • s: Scalar
  • p: P-vector

Returned

  • sp: S * p

Note

It is permissible for p and sp to be the same array.

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ERFA.sxpvFunction
sxpv(s, pv)

Multiply a pv-vector by a scalar.

Deprecated

Use s .* pv instead.

Given

  • s: Scalar
  • pv: Pv-vector

Returned

  • spv: s * pv

Note

It is permissible for pv and spv to be the same array

Called

  • s2xpv: multiply pv-vector by two scalars
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ERFA.taittFunction
taitt(tai1, tai2)

Time scale transformation: International Atomic Time, TAI, to Terrestrial Time, TT.

Given

  • tai1, tai2: TAI as a 2-part Julian Date

Returned

  • tt1, tt2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date

Note

tai1+tai2 is Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments, for example where tai1 is the Julian Day Number and tai2 is the fraction of a day. The returned tt1,tt2 follow suit.

References

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

  • Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, P. Kenneth Seidelmann (ed), University Science Books (1992)

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ERFA.taiut1Function
taiut1(tai1, tai2, dta)

Time scale transformation: International Atomic Time, TAI, to Universal Time, UT1.

Given

  • tai1, tai2: TAI as a 2-part Julian Date
  • dta: UT1-TAI in seconds

Returned

  • ut11, ut12: UT1 as a 2-part Julian Date

Notes

  1. tai1+tai2 is Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments, for example where tai1 is the Julian Day Number and tai2 is the fraction of a day. The returned UT11,UT12 follow suit.

  2. The argument dta, i.e. UT1-TAI, is an observed quantity, and is available from IERS tabulations.

Reference

  • Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, P. Kenneth Seidelmann (ed), University Science Books (1992)
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ERFA.taiutcFunction
taiutc(tai1, tai2)

Time scale transformation: International Atomic Time, TAI, to Coordinated Universal Time, UTC.

Given

  • tai1, tai2: TAI as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • utc1, utc2: UTC as a 2-part quasi Julian Date (Notes 1-3)

Notes

  1. tai1+tai2 is Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments, for example where tai1 is the Julian Day Number and tai2 is the fraction of a day. The returned utc1 and utc2 form an analogous pair, except that a special convention is used, to deal with the problem of leap seconds - see the next note.

  2. JD cannot unambiguously represent UTC during a leap second unless special measures are taken. The convention in the present function is that the JD day represents UTC days whether the length is 86399, 86400 or 86401 SI seconds. In the 1960-1972 era there were smaller jumps (in either direction) each time the linear UTC(TAI) expression was changed, and these "mini-leaps" are also included in the ERFA convention.

  3. The function d2dtf can be used to transform the UTC quasi-JD into calendar date and clock time, including UTC leap second handling.

  4. The warning status "dubious year" flags UTCs that predate the introduction of the time scale or that are too far in the future to be trusted. See dat for further details.

Called

References

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

  • Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, P. Kenneth Seidelmann (ed), University Science Books (1992)

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ERFA.tcbtdbFunction
tcbtdb(tcb1, tcb2)

Time scale transformation: Barycentric Coordinate Time, TCB, to Barycentric Dynamical Time, TDB.

Given

  • tcb1, tcb2: TCB as a 2-part Julian Date

Returned

  • tdb1, tdb2: TDB as a 2-part Julian Date

Notes

  1. tcb1+tcb2 is Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments, for example where tcb1 is the Julian Day Number and tcb2 is the fraction of a day. The returned tdb1,tdb2 follow suit.

  2. The 2006 IAU General Assembly introduced a conventional linear transformation between TDB and TCB. This transformation compensates for the drift between TCB and terrestrial time TT, and keeps TDB approximately centered on TT. Because the relationship between TT and TCB depends on the adopted solar system ephemeris, the degree of alignment between TDB and TT over long intervals will vary according to which ephemeris is used. Former definitions of TDB attempted to avoid this problem by stipulating that TDB and TT should differ only by periodic effects. This is a good description of the nature of the relationship but eluded precise mathematical formulation. The conventional linear relationship adopted in 2006 sidestepped these difficulties whilst delivering a TDB that in practice was consistent with values before that date.

  3. TDB is essentially the same as Teph, the time argument for the JPL solar system ephemerides.

Reference

  • IAU 2006 Resolution B3
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ERFA.tcgttFunction
tcgtt(tcg1, tcg2)

Time scale transformation: Geocentric Coordinate Time, TCG, to Terrestrial Time, TT.

Given

  • tcg1, tcg2: TCG as a 2-part Julian Date

Returned

  • tt1, tt2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date

Note

tcg1+tcg2 is Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments, for example where tcg1 is the Julian Day Number and tcg22 is the fraction of a day. The returned tt1,tt2 follow suit.

References

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003),. IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

  • IAU 2000 Resolution B1.9

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ERFA.tdbtcbFunction
tdbtcb(tdb1, tdb2)

Time scale transformation: Barycentric Dynamical Time, TDB, to Barycentric Coordinate Time, TCB.

Given

  • tdb1, tdb2: TDB as a 2-part Julian Date

Returned

  • tcb1, tcb2: TCB as a 2-part Julian Date

Notes

  1. tdb1+tdb2 is Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments, for example where tdb1 is the Julian Day Number and tdb2 is the fraction of a day. The returned tcb1,tcb2 follow suit.

  2. The 2006 IAU General Assembly introduced a conventional linear transformation between TDB and TCB. This transformation compensates for the drift between TCB and terrestrial time TT, and keeps TDB approximately centered on TT. Because the relationship between TT and TCB depends on the adopted solar system ephemeris, the degree of alignment between TDB and TT over long intervals will vary according to which ephemeris is used. Former definitions of TDB attempted to avoid this problem by stipulating that TDB and TT should differ only by periodic effects. This is a good description of the nature of the relationship but eluded precise mathematical formulation. The conventional linear relationship adopted in 2006 sidestepped these difficulties whilst delivering a TDB that in practice was consistent with values before that date.

  3. TDB is essentially the same as Teph, the time argument for the JPL solar system ephemerides.

Reference

  • IAU 2006 Resolution B3
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ERFA.tdbttFunction
tdbtt(tdb1, tdb2, dtr)

Time scale transformation: Barycentric Dynamical Time, TDB, to Terrestrial Time, TT.

Given

  • tdb1, tdb2: TDB as a 2-part Julian Date
  • dtr: TDB-TT in seconds

Returned

  • tt1, tt2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date

Notes

  1. tdb1+tdb2 is Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments, for example where tdb1 is the Julian Day Number and tdb2 is the fraction of a day. The returned tt1,tt2 follow suit.

  2. The argument dtr represents the quasi-periodic component of the GR transformation between TT and TCB. It is dependent upon the adopted solar-system ephemeris, and can be obtained by numerical integration, by interrogating a precomputed time ephemeris or by evaluating a model such as that implemented in the ERFA function dtdb. The quantity is dominated by an annual term of 1.7 ms amplitude.

  3. TDB is essentially the same as Teph, the time argument for the JPL solar system ephemerides.

References

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

  • IAU 2006 Resolution 3

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ERFA.tf2aFunction
tf2a(s, ihour, imin, sec)

Convert hours, minutes, seconds to radians.

Given

  • s: Sign: '-' = negative, otherwise positive
  • ihour: Hours
  • imin: Minutes
  • sec: Seconds

Returned

  • rad: Angle in radians

Notes

  1. The result is computed even if any of the range checks fail.

  2. Negative ihour, imin and/or sec produce a warning status, but the absolute value is used in the conversion.

  3. If there are multiple errors, the status value reflects only the first, the smallest taking precedence.

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ERFA.tf2dFunction
tf2d(s, ihour, imin, sec)

Convert hours, minutes, seconds to days.

Given

  • s: Sign: '-' = negative, otherwise positive
  • ihour: Hours
  • imin: Minutes
  • sec: Seconds

Returned

  • days: Interval in days

Notes

  1. The result is computed even if any of the range checks fail.

  2. Negative ihour, imin and/or sec produce a warning status, but the absolute value is used in the conversion.

  3. If there are multiple errors, the status value reflects only the first, the smallest taking precedence.

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ERFA.tporsMethod
tpors(xi, eta, ra, dec)

In the tangent plane projection, given the rectangular coordinates of a star and its spherical coordinates, determine the spherical coordinates of the tangent point.

Given

  • xi, eta: rectangular coordinates of star image (Note 2)
  • a, b: star's spherical coordinates (Note 3)

Returned

  • status: number of solutions:
    • 0 = no solutions returned (Note 5)
    • 1 = only the first solution is useful (Note 6)
    • 2 = both solutions are useful (Note 6)
  • a01, b01: tangent point's spherical coordinates, Soln. 1
  • a02, b02: tangent point's spherical coordinates, Soln. 2

Notes

  1. The tangent plane projection is also called the "gnomonic projection" and the "central projection".

  2. The eta axis points due north in the adopted coordinate system. If the spherical coordinates are observed (RA,Dec), the tangent plane coordinates (xi,eta) are conventionally called the "standard coordinates". If the spherical coordinates are with respect to a right-handed triad, (xi,eta) are also right-handed. The units of (xi,eta) are, effectively, radians at the tangent point.

  3. All angular arguments are in radians.

  4. The angles a01 and a02 are returned in the range 0-2pi. The angles b01 and b02 are returned in the range +/-pi, but in the usual, non-pole-crossing, case, the range is +/-pi/2.

  5. Cases where there is no solution can arise only near the poles. For example, it is clearly impossible for a star at the pole itself to have a non-zero xi value, and hence it is meaningless to ask where the tangent point would have to be to bring about this combination of xi and dec.

  6. Also near the poles, cases can arise where there are two useful solutions. The return value indicates whether the second of the two solutions returned is useful; 1 indicates only one useful solution, the usual case.

  7. The basis of the algorithm is to solve the spherical triangle PSC, where P is the north celestial pole, S is the star and C is the tangent point. The spherical coordinates of the tangent point are [a0,b0]; writing rho^2 = (xi^2+eta^2) and r^2 = (1+rho^2), side c is then (pi/2-b), side p is sqrt(xi^2+eta^2) and side s (to be found) is (pi/2-b0). Angle C is given by sin(C) = xi/rho and cos(C) = eta/rho. Angle P (to be found) is the longitude difference between star and tangent point (a-a0).

  8. This function is a member of the following set:

    sphericalvectorsolve for
    tpxestpxevxi,eta
    tpststpstvstar
    tporstporvorigin

Called

  • anp: normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi

References

  • Calabretta M.R. & Greisen, E.W., 2002, "Representations of celestial coordinates in FITS", Astron.Astrophys. 395, 1077

  • Green, R.M., "Spherical Astronomy", Cambridge University Press, 1987, Chapter 13.

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ERFA.tporvMethod
tporv(xi, eta, v)

In the tangent plane projection, given the rectangular coordinates of a star and its direction cosines, determine the direction cosines of the tangent point.

Given

  • xi, eta: rectangular coordinates of star image (Note 2)
  • v: star's direction cosines (Note 3)

Returned

  • status: number of solutions:
    • 0 = no solutions returned (Note 4)
    • 1 = only the first solution is useful (Note 5)
    • 2 = both solutions are useful (Note 5)
  • v01: tangent point's direction cosines, Solution 1
  • v02: tangent point's direction cosines, Solution 2

Notes

  1. The tangent plane projection is also called the "gnomonic projection" and the "central projection".

  2. The eta axis points due north in the adopted coordinate system. If the direction cosines represent observed (RA,Dec., the tangent plane coordinates (xi,eta. are conventionally called the "standard coordinates". If the direction cosines are with respect to a right-handed triad, (xi,eta. are also right-handed. The units of (xi,eta. are, effectively, radians at the tangent point.

  3. The vector v must be of unit length or the result will be wrong.

  4. Cases where there is no solution can arise only near the poles. For example, it is clearly impossible for a star at the pole itself to have a non-zero xi value, and hence it is meaningless to ask where the tangent point would have to be.

  5. Also near the poles, cases can arise where there are two useful solutions. The return value indicates whether the second of the two solutions returned is useful; 1 indicates only one useful solution, the usual case.

  6. The basis of the algorithm is to solve the spherical triangle PSC, where P is the north celestial pole, S is the star and C is the tangent point. Calling the celestial spherical coordinates of the star and tangent point (a,b. and (a0,b0) respectively, and writing rho^2 = (xi^2+eta^2. and r^2 = (1+rho^2), and transforming the vector v into (a,b. in the normal way, side c is then (pi/2-b., side p is sqrt(xi^2+eta^2) and side s (to be found. is (pi/2-b0), while angle C is given by sin(C) = xi/rho and cos(C. = eta/rho; angle P (to be found) is (a-a0). After solving the spherical triangle, the result (a0,b0. can be expressed in vector form as v0.

  7. This function is a member of the following set:

    sphericalvectorsolve for
    tpxestpxevxi,eta
    tpststpstvstar
    tporstporvorigin

References

  • Calabretta M.R. & Greisen, E.W., 2002, "Representations of celestial coordinates in FITS", Astron.Astrophys. 395, 1077

  • Green, R.M., "Spherical Astronomy", Cambridge University Press, 1987, Chapter 13.

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ERFA.tpstsMethod
tpsts(xi, eta, raz, decz)

In the tangent plane projection, given the star's rectangular coordinates and the spherical coordinates of the tangent point, solve for the spherical coordinates of the star.

Given

  • xi, eta: rectangular coordinates of star image (Note 2)
  • a0, b0: tangent point's spherical coordinates

Returned

  • a, b: star's spherical coordinates

Notes

  1. The tangent plane projection is also called the "gnomonic projection" and the "central projection".

  2. The eta axis points due north in the adopted coordinate system. If the spherical coordinates are observed (RA,Dec), the tangent plane coordinates (xi,eta) are conventionally called the "standard coordinates". If the spherical coordinates are with respect to a right-handed triad, (xi,eta) are also right-handed. The units of (xi,eta) are, effectively, radians at the tangent point.

  3. All angular arguments are in radians.

  4. This function is a member of the following set:

    sphericalvectorsolve for
    tpxestpxevxi,eta
    tpststpstvstar
    tporstporvorigin

Called

  • anp normalize angle into range 0 to 2pi

References

  • Calabretta M.R. & Greisen, E.W., 2002, "Representations of celestial coordinates in FITS", Astron.Astrophys. 395, 1077

  • Green, R.M., "Spherical Astronomy", Cambridge University Press, 1987, Chapter 13.

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ERFA.tpstvMethod
tpstv(xi, eta, vz)

In the tangent plane projection, given the star's rectangular coordinates and the direction cosines of the tangent point, solve for the direction cosines of the star.

Given

  • xi, eta: rectangular coordinates of star image (Note 2)
  • v0: tangent point's direction cosines

Returned

  • v: star's direction cosines

Notes

  1. The tangent plane projection is also called the "gnomonic projection" and the "central projection".

  2. The eta axis points due north in the adopted coordinate system. If the direction cosines represent observed (RA,Dec), the tangent plane coordinates (xi,eta) are conventionally called the "standard coordinates". If the direction cosines are with respect to a right-handed triad, (xi,eta) are also right-handed. The units of (xi,eta) are, effectively, radians at the tangent point.

  3. The method used is to complete the star vector in the (xi,eta) based triad and normalize it, then rotate the triad to put the tangent point at the pole with the x-axis aligned to zero longitude. Writing (a0,b0) for the celestial spherical coordinates of the tangent point, the sequence of rotations is (b-pi/2) around the x-axis followed by (-a-pi/2) around the z-axis.

  4. If vector v0 is not of unit length, the returned vector v will be wrong.

  5. If vector v0 points at a pole, the returned vector v will be based on the arbitrary assumption that the longitude coordinate of the tangent point is zero.

  6. This function is a member of the following set:

    sphericalvectorsolve for
    tpxestpxevxi,eta
    tpststpstvstar
    tporstporvorigin

References

  • Calabretta M.R. & Greisen, E.W., 2002, "Representations of celestial coordinates in FITS", Astron.Astrophys. 395, 1077

  • Green, R.M., "Spherical Astronomy", Cambridge University Press, 1987, Chapter 13.

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ERFA.tpxesMethod
tpxes(ra, dec, raz, decz)

In the tangent plane projection, given celestial spherical coordinates for a star and the tangent point, solve for the star's rectangular coordinates in the tangent plane.

Given

  • a, b: star's spherical coordinates
  • a0, b0: tangent point's spherical coordinates

Returned

  • status:
    • 0 = OK
    • 1 = star too far from axis
    • 2 = antistar on tangent plane
    • 3 = antistar too far from axis
  • xi, eta: rectangular coordinates of star image (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The tangent plane projection is also called the "gnomonic projection" and the "central projection".

  2. The eta axis points due north in the adopted coordinate system. If the spherical coordinates are observed (RA,Dec), the tangent plane coordinates (xi,eta) are conventionally called the "standard coordinates". For right-handed spherical coordinates, (xi,eta) are also right-handed. The units of (xi,eta) are, effectively, radians at the tangent point.

  3. All angular arguments are in radians.

  4. This function is a member of the following set:

    sphericalvectorsolve for
    tpxestpxevxi,eta
    tpststpstvstar
    tporstporvorigin

References

  • Calabretta M.R. & Greisen, E.W., 2002, "Representations of celestial coordinates in FITS", Astron.Astrophys. 395, 1077

  • Green, R.M., "Spherical Astronomy", Cambridge University Press, 1987, Chapter 13.

source
ERFA.tpxevMethod
tpxev(v, vz)

In the tangent plane projection, given celestial direction cosines for a star and the tangent point, solve for the star's rectangular coordinates in the tangent plane.

Given

  • v: direction cosines of star (Note 4)
  • v0: direction cosines of tangent point (Note 4)

Returned

  • status:
    • 0 = OK
    • 1 = star too far from axis
    • 2 = antistar on tangent plane
    • 3 = antistar too far from axis
  • xi, eta: tangent plane coordinates of star

Notes

  1. The tangent plane projection is also called the "gnomonic projection" and the "central projection".

  2. The eta axis points due north in the adopted coordinate system. If the direction cosines represent observed (RA,Dec), the tangent plane coordinates (xi,eta) are conventionally called the "standard coordinates". If the direction cosines are with respect to a right-handed triad, (xi,eta) are also right-handed. The units of (xi,eta) are, effectively, radians at the tangent point.

  3. The method used is to extend the star vector to the tangent plane and then rotate the triad so that (x,y) becomes (xi,eta). Writing (a,b) for the celestial spherical coordinates of the star, the sequence of rotations is (a+pi/2) around the z-axis followed by (pi/2-b) around the x-axis.

  4. If vector v0 is not of unit length, or if vector v is of zero length, the results will be wrong.

  5. If v0 points at a pole, the returned (xi,eta) will be based on the arbitrary assumption that the longitude coordinate of the tangent point is zero.

  6. This function is a member of the following set:

    sphericalvectorsolve for
    tpxestpxevxi,eta
    tpststpstvstar
    tporstporvorigin

References

  • Calabretta M.R. & Greisen, E.W., 2002, "Representations of celestial coordinates in FITS", Astron.Astrophys. 395, 1077

  • Green, R.M., "Spherical Astronomy", Cambridge University Press, 1987, Chapter 13.

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ERFA.trFunction
tr(r)

Transpose an r-matrix.

Deprecated

Use r' instead.

Given

  • r: R-matrix

Returned

  • rt: Transpose

Note

It is permissible for r and rt to be the same array.

Called

  • cr: copy r-matrix
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ERFA.trxpFunction
trxp(r, p)

Multiply a p-vector by the transpose of an r-matrix.

Deprecated

Use r' * p instead.

Given

  • r: R-matrix
  • p: P-vector

Returned

  • trp: R * p

Note

It is permissible for p and trp to be the same array.

Called

  • tr: transpose r-matrix
  • rxp: product of r-matrix and p-vector
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ERFA.trxpvFunction
trxpv(r, pv)

Multiply a pv-vector by the transpose of an r-matrix.

Deprecated

Use [r' * pv[1], r' * pv[2]] instead.

Given

  • r: R-matrix
  • pv: Pv-vector

Returned

  • trpv: R * pv

Note

It is permissible for pv and trpv to be the same array.

Called

  • tr: transpose r-matrix
  • rxpv: product of r-matrix and pv-vector
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ERFA.tttaiFunction
tttai(tt1, tt2)

Time scale transformation: Terrestrial Time, TT, to International Atomic Time, TAI.

Given

  • tt1, tt2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date

Returned

  • tai1, tai2: TAI as a 2-part Julian Date

Note

tt1+tt2 is Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments, for example where tt1 is the Julian Day Number and tt2 is the fraction of a day. The returned tai1,tai2 follow suit.

References

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

  • Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, P. Kenneth Seidelmann (ed), University Science Books (1992)

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ERFA.tttcgFunction
tttcg(tt1, tt2)

Time scale transformation: Terrestrial Time, TT, to Geocentric Coordinate Time, TCG.

Given

  • tt1, tt2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date

Returned

  • tcg1, tcg2: TCG as a 2-part Julian Date

Note

tt1+tt2 is Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments, for example where tt1 is the Julian Day Number and tt2 is the fraction of a day. The returned tcg1,tcg2 follow suit.

References

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

  • IAU 2000 Resolution B1.9

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ERFA.tttdbFunction
tttdb(tt1, tt2, dtr)

Time scale transformation: Terrestrial Time, TT, to Barycentric Dynamical Time, TDB.

Given

  • tt1, tt2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date
  • dtr: TDB-TT in seconds

Returned

  • tdb1, tdb2: TDB as a 2-part Julian Date

Notes

  1. tt1+tt2 is Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments, for example where tt1 is the Julian Day Number and tt2 is the fraction of a day. The returned tdb1,tdb2 follow suit.

  2. The argument dtr represents the quasi-periodic component of the GR transformation between TT and TCB. It is dependent upon the adopted solar-system ephemeris, and can be obtained by numerical integration, by interrogating a precomputed time ephemeris or by evaluating a model such as that implemented in the ERFA function dtdb. The quantity is dominated by an annual term of 1.7 ms amplitude.

  3. TDB is essentially the same as Teph, the time argument for the JPL solar system ephemerides.

References

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

  • IAU 2006 Resolution 3

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ERFA.ttut1Function
ttut1(tt1, tt2, dt)

Time scale transformation: Terrestrial Time, TT, to Universal Time, UT1.

Given

  • tt1, tt2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date
  • dt: TT-UT1 in seconds

Returned

  • ut11, ut12: UT1 as a 2-part Julian Date

Notes

  1. tt1+tt2 is Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments, for example where tt1 is the Julian Day Number and tt2 is the fraction of a day. The returned ut11,ut12 follow suit.

  2. The argument dt is classical Delta T.

Reference

  • Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, P. Kenneth Seidelmann (ed), University Science Books (1992)
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ERFA.ut1taiFunction
ut1tai(ut11, ut12, dta)

Time scale transformation: Universal Time, UT1, to International Atomic Time, TAI.

Given

  • ut11, ut12: UT1 as a 2-part Julian Date
  • dta: UT1-TAI in seconds

Returned

  • tai1, tai2: TAI as a 2-part Julian Date

Notes

  1. ut11+ut12 is Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments, for example where ut11 is the Julian Day Number and ut12 is the fraction of a day. The returned tai1,tai2 follow suit.

  2. The argument dta, i.e. UT1-TAI, is an observed quantity, and is available from IERS tabulations.

Reference

  • Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, P. Kenneth Seidelmann (ed), University Science Books (1992)
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ERFA.ut1ttFunction
ut1tt(ut11, ut12, dt)

Time scale transformation: Universal Time, UT1, to Terrestrial Time, TT.

Given

  • ut11, ut12: UT1 as a 2-part Julian Date
  • dt: TT-UT1 in seconds

Returned

  • tt1, tt2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date

Notes

  1. ut11+ut12 is Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments, for example where ut11 is the Julian Day Number and ut12 is the fraction of a day. The returned tt1,tt2 follow suit.

  2. The argument dt is classical Delta T.

Reference

  • Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, P. Kenneth Seidelmann (ed), University Science Books (1992)
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ERFA.ut1utcFunction
ut1utc(ut11, ut12, dut1)

Time scale transformation: Universal Time, UT1, to Coordinated Universal Time, UTC.

Given

  • ut11, ut12: UT1 as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)
  • dut1: Delta UT1: UT1-UTC in seconds (Note 2)

Returned

  • utc1, utc2: UTC as a 2-part quasi Julian Date (Notes 3,4)

Notes

  1. ut11+ut12 is Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments, for example where ut11 is the Julian Day Number and ut12 is the fraction of a day. The returned utc1 and utc2 form an analogous pair, except that a special convention is used, to deal with the problem of leap seconds - see Note 3.

  2. Delta UT1 can be obtained from tabulations provided by the International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service. The value changes abruptly by 1s at a leap second; however, close to a leap second the algorithm used here is tolerant of the "wrong" choice of value being made.

  3. JD cannot unambiguously represent UTC during a leap second unless special measures are taken. The convention in the present function is that the returned quasi JD day UTC1+UTC2 represents UTC days whether the length is 86399, 86400 or 86401 SI seconds.

  4. The function d2dtf can be used to transform the UTC quasi-JD into calendar date and clock time, including UTC leap second handling.

  5. The warning status "dubious year" flags UTCs that predate the introduction of the time scale or that are too far in the future to be trusted. See dat for further details.

Called

  • jd2cal: JD to Gregorian calendar
  • dat: delta(AT) = TAI-UTC
  • cal2jd: Gregorian calendar to JD

References

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

  • Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, P. Kenneth Seidelmann (ed), University Science Books (1992)

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ERFA.utctaiMethod
utctai(utc1, utc2)

Time scale transformation: Coordinated Universal Time, UTC, to International Atomic Time, TAI.

Given

  • utc1, utc2: UTC as a 2-part quasi Julian Date (Notes 1-4)

Returned

  • tai1, tai2: TAI as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 5)

Notes

  1. utc1+utc2 is quasi Julian Date (see Note 2), apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments, for example where utc1 is the Julian Day Number and utc2 is the fraction of a day.

  2. JD cannot unambiguously represent UTC during a leap second unless special measures are taken. The convention in the present function is that the JD day represents UTC days whether the length is 86399, 86400 or 86401 SI seconds. In the 1960-1972 era there were smaller jumps (in either direction) each time the linear UTC(TAI) expression was changed, and these "mini-leaps" are also included in the ERFA convention.

  3. The warning status "dubious year" flags UTCs that predate the introduction of the time scale or that are too far in the future to be trusted. See dat for further details.

  4. The function dtf2d converts from calendar date and time of day into 2-part Julian Date, and in the case of UTC implements the leap-second-ambiguity convention described above.

  5. The returned TAI1,TAI2 are such that their sum is the TAI Julian Date.

Called

  • jd2cal: JD to Gregorian calendar
  • dat: delta(AT) = TAI-UTC
  • cal2jd: Gregorian calendar to JD

References

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

  • Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, P. Kenneth Seidelmann (ed), University Science Books (1992)

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ERFA.utcut1Function
utcut1(utc1, utc2, dut1)

Time scale transformation: Coordinated Universal Time, UTC, to Universal Time, UT1.

Given

  • utc1, utc2: UTC as a 2-part quasi Julian Date (Notes 1-4)
  • dut1: Delta UT1 = UT1-UTC in seconds (Note 5)

Returned

  • ut11, ut12: UT1 as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 6)

Notes

  1. utc1+utc2 is quasi Julian Date (see Note 2), apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments, for example where utc1 is the Julian Day Number and utc2 is the fraction of a day.

  2. JD cannot unambiguously represent UTC during a leap second unless special measures are taken. The convention in the present function is that the JD day represents UTC days whether the length is 86399, 86400 or 86401 SI seconds.

  3. The warning status "dubious year" flags UTCs that predate the introduction of the time scale or that are too far in the future to be trusted. See dat for further details.

  4. The function dtf2d converts from calendar date and time of day into 2-part Julian Date, and in the case of UTC implements the leap-second-ambiguity convention described above.

  5. Delta UT1 can be obtained from tabulations provided by the International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service. It is the caller's responsibility to supply a dut1 argument containing the UT1-UTC value that matches the given UTC.

  6. The returned ut11,ut12 are such that their sum is the UT1 Julian Date.

References

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)

  • Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, P. Kenneth Seidelmann (ed), University Science Books (1992)

Called

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ERFA.xy06Method
xy06(date1, date2)

X,Y coordinates of celestial intermediate pole from series based on IAU 2006 precession and IAU 2000A nutation.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • x, y: CIP X,Y coordinates (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The X,Y coordinates are those of the unit vector towards the celestial intermediate pole. They represent the combined effects of frame bias, precession and nutation.

  3. The fundamental arguments used are as adopted in IERS Conventions (2003) and are from Simon et al. (1994) and Souchay et al. (1999).

  4. This is an alternative to the angles-based method, via the ERFA function fw2xy and as used in xys06a for example. The two methods agree at the 1 microarcsecond level (at present), a negligible amount compared with the intrinsic accuracy of the models. However, it would be unwise to mix the two methods (angles-based and series-based) in a single application.

Called

  • fal03: mean anomaly of the Moon
  • falp03: mean anomaly of the Sun
  • faf03: mean argument of the latitude of the Moon
  • fad03: mean elongation of the Moon from the Sun
  • faom03: mean longitude of the Moon's ascending node
  • fame03: mean longitude of Mercury
  • fave03: mean longitude of Venus
  • fae03: mean longitude of Earth
  • fama03: mean longitude of Mars
  • faju03: mean longitude of Jupiter
  • fasa03: mean longitude of Saturn
  • faur03: mean longitude of Uranus
  • fane03: mean longitude of Neptune
  • fapa03: general accumulated precession in longitude

References

  • Capitaine, N., Wallace, P.T. & Chapront, J., 2003, Astron.Astrophys., 412, 567

  • Capitaine, N. & Wallace, P.T., 2006, Astron.Astrophys. 450, 855

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), 2004, IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG

  • Simon, J.L., Bretagnon, P., Chapront, J., Chapront-Touze, M., Francou, G. & Laskar, J., Astron.Astrophys., 1994, 282, 663

  • Souchay, J., Loysel, B., Kinoshita, H., Folgueira, M., 1999, Astron.Astrophys.Supp.Ser. 135, 111

  • Wallace, P.T. & Capitaine, N., 2006, Astron.Astrophys. 459, 981

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ERFA.xys00aFunction
xys00a(date1, date2)

For a given TT date, compute the X,Y coordinates of the Celestial Intermediate Pole and the CIO locator s, using the IAU 2000A precession-nutation model.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • x, y: Celestial Intermediate Pole (Note 2)
  • s: The CIO locator s (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The Celestial Intermediate Pole coordinates are the x,y components of the unit vector in the Geocentric Celestial Reference System.

  3. The CIO locator s (in radians) positions the Celestial Intermediate Origin on the equator of the CIP.

  4. A faster, but slightly less accurate result (about 1 mas for X,Y), can be obtained by using instead the xys00b function.

Called

  • pnm00a: classical NPB matrix, IAU 2000A
  • bpn2xy: extract CIP X,Y coordinates from NPB matrix
  • s00: the CIO locator s, given X,Y, IAU 2000A

Reference

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)
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ERFA.xys00bFunction
xys00b(date1, date2)

For a given TT date, compute the X,Y coordinates of the Celestial Intermediate Pole and the CIO locator s, using the IAU 2000B precession-nutation model.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • x, y: Celestial Intermediate Pole (Note 2)
  • s: The CIO locator s (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The Celestial Intermediate Pole coordinates are the x,y components of the unit vector in the Geocentric Celestial Reference System.

  3. The CIO locator s (in radians) positions the Celestial Intermediate Origin on the equator of the CIP.

  4. The present function is faster, but slightly less accurate (about 1 mas in X,Y), than the xys00a function.

Called

  • pnm00b: classical NPB matrix, IAU 2000B
  • bpn2xy: extract CIP X,Y coordinates from NPB matrix
  • s00: the CIO locator s, given X,Y, IAU 2000A

Reference

  • McCarthy, D. D., Petit, G. (eds.), IERS Conventions (2003), IERS Technical Note No. 32, BKG (2004)
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ERFA.xys06aFunction
xys06a(date1, date2)

For a given TT date, compute the X,Y coordinates of the Celestial Intermediate Pole and the CIO locator s, using the IAU 2006 precession and IAU 2000A nutation models.

Given

  • date1, date2: TT as a 2-part Julian Date (Note 1)

Returned

  • x, y: Celestial Intermediate Pole (Note 2)
  • s: The CIO locator s (Note 2)

Notes

  1. The TT date date1+date2 is a Julian Date, apportioned in any convenient way between the two arguments. For example, JD(TT)=2450123.7 could be expressed in any of these ways, among others:

    date1date2Method
    2450123.70.0JD
    2451545.0-1421.3J2000
    2400000.550123.2MJD
    2450123.50.2date & time

    The JD method is the most natural and convenient to use in cases where the loss of several decimal digits of resolution is acceptable. The J2000 method is best matched to the way the argument is handled internally and will deliver the optimum resolution. The MJD method and the date & time methods are both good compromises between resolution and convenience.

  2. The Celestial Intermediate Pole coordinates are the x,y components of the unit vector in the Geocentric Celestial Reference System.

  3. The CIO locator s (in radians) positions the Celestial Intermediate Origin on the equator of the CIP.

  4. Series-based solutions for generating X and Y are also available: see Capitaine & Wallace (2006) and xy06.

Called

  • pnm06a: classical NPB matrix, IAU 2006/2000A
  • bpn2xy: extract CIP X,Y coordinates from NPB matrix
  • s06: the CIO locator s, given X,Y, IAU 2006

References

  • Capitaine, N. & Wallace, P.T., 2006, Astron.Astrophys. 450, 855

  • Wallace, P.T. & Capitaine, N., 2006, Astron.Astrophys. 459, 981

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ERFA.zpFunction
zp(p)

Zero a p-vector.

Deprecated

Use fill!(p, 0.0) instead.

Returned

  • p: zero p-vector
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ERFA.zpvFunction
zpv(pv)

Zero a pv-vector.

Deprecated

Use fill!.(pv, 0.0) instead.

Returned

  • p: zero pv-vector
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ERFA.zrFunction
zr(r)

Initialize an r-matrix to the null matrix.

Deprecated

Use fill!(r, 0.0) instead.

Returned

  • r: r-matrix
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