Difference between revisions of "Galactic System of Coordinates"

From ExoDictionary
Jump to: navigation, search
m (1 revision(s))
 
(No difference)

Latest revision as of 16:00, 7 April 2007

This definition page has been automatically generated.
You can help ExoDictionary by expanding, updating, or correcting it.


This autostub has not yet had its initial copyediting proof and may contain significant formatting and even factual errors. You can improve Exodictionary by cleaning up the page markup and verifying that the definition is correct and then removing this tag.


This autostub has not yet had its initial categorization proof and may be categorized incorrectly. You can improve Exodictionary by removing inappropriate categories and then removing this tag.


Galactic System of Coordinates

</dt>
An astronomical coordinate system using latitude measured north and south from the galactic equator and longitude measured in the sense of increasing right ascension from 0 to 360 degrees. See coordinate, table. </dd>
Galactic latitude is designated b, galactic longitude l. The reference points for galactic coordinates were changed by action of the International Astronomical Union in 1958. The new values are: the north galactic pole lies in the direction right ascension = 12 hours 49 minutes, declination = 27.4 degrees N (equinox 1950); the new zero of longitude is the great semicircle originating at the new north galactic pole at the position angle 0 = 123 degrees with respect to the equatorial pole for 1950. [[/a>|/a> ]]

References

This article is based on NASA's Dictionary of Technical Terms for Aerospace Use