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celestial sphere
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celestial sphere

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The main features of the celestial sphere. Declination runs from 0° at the celestial equator to 90° at the celestial poles. Right ascension is measured in hours eastwards from the vernal equinox, one hour corresponding to 15° of longitude.

Imaginary sphere surrounding the Earth, on which the celestial bodies seem to lie. The positions of bodies such as stars, planets, and galaxies are specified by their coordinates on the celestial sphere. The equivalents of latitude and longitude on the celestial sphere are called declination and right ascension (which is measured in hours from 0 to 24). The celestial poles lie directly above the Earth's poles, and the celestial equator lies over the Earth's Equator. The celestial sphere appears to rotate once around the Earth each day, actually a result of the rotation of the Earth on its axis.



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Covering nearly a quarter of the celestial hemisphere, the Sloan Digital Sky Survey over the past 5 years has mapped the location and brightness of several hundred million objects.
A larger structure of hoops resembling a jungle gym to the uninitiated is actually a celestial hemisphere for showing Earth's motion and axial tilt.
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey, which began taking preliminary data a year ago and continues through 2005, will ultimately image and map the locations of millions of objects across a huge stretch of the northern celestial hemisphere (SN: 1/23/99, p.
 
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