From 0b8ca6637be94f7814cafa7d01ad4699672ff336 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Darrell Anderson Date: Tue, 21 Jan 2014 22:06:48 -0600 Subject: Beautify docbook files --- .../docs/tdeedu/kstars/hourangle.docbook | 47 +++------------------- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 42 deletions(-) (limited to 'tde-i18n-en_GB/docs/tdeedu/kstars/hourangle.docbook') diff --git a/tde-i18n-en_GB/docs/tdeedu/kstars/hourangle.docbook b/tde-i18n-en_GB/docs/tdeedu/kstars/hourangle.docbook index 19d3e1b1a58..659c22cd242 100644 --- a/tde-i18n-en_GB/docs/tdeedu/kstars/hourangle.docbook +++ b/tde-i18n-en_GB/docs/tdeedu/kstars/hourangle.docbook @@ -1,46 +1,9 @@ -Jason Harris +Jason Harris -Hour Angle -Hour Angle -Local Meridian Sidereal Time -As explained in the Sidereal Time article, the Right Ascension of an object indicates the Sidereal Time at which it will transit across your Local Meridian. An object's Hour Angle is defined as the difference between the current Local Sidereal Time and the Right Ascension of the object: HAobj = LST - RAobj Thus, the object's Hour Angle indicates how much Sidereal Time has passed since the object was on the Local Meridian. It is also the angular distance between the object and the meridian, measured in hours (1 hour = 15 degrees). For example, if an object has an hour angle of 2.5 hours, it transited across the Local Meridian 2.5 hours ago, and is currently 37.5 degrees West of the Meridian. Negative Hour Angles indicate the time until the next transit across the Local Meridian. Of course, an Hour Angle of zero means the object is currently on the Local Meridian. +Hour Angle +Hour Angle +Local Meridian Sidereal Time +As explained in the Sidereal Time article, the Right Ascension of an object indicates the Sidereal Time at which it will transit across your Local Meridian. An object's Hour Angle is defined as the difference between the current Local Sidereal Time and the Right Ascension of the object: HAobj = LST - RAobj Thus, the object's Hour Angle indicates how much Sidereal Time has passed since the object was on the Local Meridian. It is also the angular distance between the object and the meridian, measured in hours (1 hour = 15 degrees). For example, if an object has an hour angle of 2.5 hours, it transited across the Local Meridian 2.5 hours ago, and is currently 37.5 degrees West of the Meridian. Negative Hour Angles indicate the time until the next transit across the Local Meridian. Of course, an Hour Angle of zero means the object is currently on the Local Meridian. -- cgit v1.2.1