transit instrument
Noun: 1. An astronomical telescope mounted on a fixed east-west axis: A transit instrument is a specialized telescope designed to rotate only along a single, precisely aligned horizontal axis that runs east to west. Its primary function is to measure the exact moment a star or other celestial body crosses the local meridian (an imaginary north-south line in the sky passing directly overhead).
The term is used specifically in the context of astronomy, surveying, and timekeeping to refer to a precise observational tool. * The observatory's transit instrument was used to determine local sidereal time with great accuracy. * Before the advent of electronic systems, navigators relied on observations made with a transit instrument to calculate longitude.
- Meridian Transit Observation: The core operation of a transit instrument. The observer times the precise instant a star's center crosses the crosshairs in the telescope's eyepiece, which are aligned with the meridian.
- Fundamental Astronomy: Historically, transit instruments were fundamental for creating star catalogs, determining the positions of celestial objects, and providing accurate time signals by observing the transits of specific stars.
- Transit Circle (Meridian Circle): A more advanced type of transit instrument that also includes precise graduated circles to measure the altitude (angular height) of a celestial body as it transits, allowing for the determination of both right ascension and declination coordinates.
- Transit Telescope: A synonymous term often used interchangeably with .
- Meridian telescope
- Transit telescope
- Meridian: The imaginary great circle on the celestial sphere that passes through the celestial poles and an observer's zenith. The transit instrument is aligned to this plane.
- Transit (Astronomical): The event of a celestial body crossing the observer's meridian. Also used for the passage of a smaller body across the disk of a larger one (e.g., the transit of Venus across the Sun).
- Theodolite: A surveying instrument with a rotating telescope for measuring horizontal and vertical angles. While also used for precise alignment, it is more versatile and portable than a fixed transit instrument.
- a telescope mounted on an axis running east and west and used to time the transit of a celestial body across the meridian