It is a common practice to fix a vertical gnomon and study the moving shadow cast by it. This shows our local solar time and gives us a hint regarding the season in which we perform the observation. The moving shadow can also tell us our latitude with high precision. In this paper we propose to exchange the roles and while keeping the shadows fixed on the ground we will move the gnomon. This lets us understand in a simple way the relevance of the tropical lines of latitude and the behavior of shadows in different locations. We then put these ideas into practice using sticks and threads during a solstice on two sites located on opposite sides of the Tropic of Capricorn.
References
1.
René R. J.
Rohr
, Les Cadrans Solaires: Histoire, Théorie, Pratique
(Editions Oberlin
, Strasbourg
, 1986
).2.
Alejandro
Gangui
, “Whither does the Sun rove?
” Phys. Teach.
49
, 91
–93
(Feb. 2011
). 3.
Nestor
Camino
and Alejandro
Gangui
, “Diurnal astronomy: Using sticks and threads to find our latitude on Earth
,” Phys. Teach.
50
, 40
–41
(Jan. 2012
). © 2015 American Association of Physics Teachers.
2015
American Association of Physics Teachers
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