Nocturnl

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  1. Sleeps during the day, awake at night. 2021 won't be bad, nothing bad will happen. Biden will be the best president in human history, all traces of covid including the mutations will be gone.
  2. Nocturnal Skate Shop has been keeping the Philly skateboard scene laced up since 2000. Kerry Getz started the shop during his professional career with Habitat.
  3. High blood pressure is known as the silent killer. But many of us, especially if we’re over 55, may be sleeping with the real silent killer: blood pressure that’s higher at night than during the day. Here’s what the research says and what you need to know to avoid being the next victim.
  4. If something is nocturnal, it belongs to or is active at night. That includes vampires, owls that like to hunt by moonlight, and that roommate who stays up playing video games until the wee hours of the morning. The adjective nocturnal comes from the Late Latin nocturnalis, which means “belonging to the night.'
A nocturnal as costume jewellery. This is a functioning nocturnal, though only about 5 cm tall. It shows the month ring on the outside in brass. The silver coloured inner disk shows the time and has an indicator on one edge. By setting the indicator to the month and day (in this case, a few days into October), centring Polaris in the hole in the middle and rotating the pointer attached to the centre to a specified circumpolar star, the arm indicates the time (in this case, 8 pm).

3 synonyms of nocturnal from the Merriam-Webster Thesaurus, plus 3 related words, definitions, and antonyms. Find another word for nocturnal. Nocturnal: of, relating to, or occurring in the night.

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A nocturnal is an instrument used to determine the local time based on the relative positions of two or more stars in the night sky. Sometimes called a horologium nocturnum (time instrument for night) or nocturlabe (in French and occasionally used by English writers), it is related to the astrolabe and sundial. Knowing the time is important in piloting for calculating tides and some nocturnals incorporate tide charts for important ports.

Even if the nightly course of the stars has been known since antiquity, mentions of a dedicated instrument for its measurement are not found before the Middle Ages. The earliest image presenting the use of a nocturnal is in a manuscript dated from the 12th century.[1]Raymond Lull repeatedly described the use of a sphaera horarum noctis or astrolabium nocturnum.[2]

With Martín Cortés de Albacar's book Arte de Navegar, published in 1551 the name and the instrument gained a larger popularity.[3]

Nocturnal Leg Cramps

It was described also c. 1530 by Petrus Apianus in his Cosmographicus Liber, republished later by Gemma Frisius with a widely circulated illustration of the instrument while being used by an observer.

Construction[edit]

A nocturnal made in Vienna.

Nocturnals have been most commonly constructed of wood or brass.

Nocturnal Definition

A nocturnal will have an outer disc marked with the months of the year, and an inner disc marked with hours (and perhaps half hours, or quarter hours on the largest instruments) as well as locations for one or more reference stars. It will also have a pointer rotating on the same axis as the discs, sometimes extended beyond the rim. The axis, or pivot point, must be such that a star can be sighted through it; usually a hollow rivet is used. Since the instrument is used at night, markings may be exaggerated or raised. Often the inner disc has a diagram of the necessary constellations and stars, to aid in locating them.

Usage[edit]

Operating scheme of a nocturnal.

A nocturnal is a simple analog computer, made of two or more dials, that will provide the local time based on the time of year and a sighting of Polaris, the North Star, and one or more other stars. In the northern hemisphere, all stars will appear to rotate about the North Star during the night, and their positions, like the progress of the sun, can be used to determine the time. The positions of the stars will change based on the time of year.

The most commonly used reference stars are the pointer stars from the Big Dipper (Ursa Major) or Kochab from the Little Dipper (Ursa Minor). The star Schedar in Cassiopeia may also be used, since it is on the opposite side of the sky from Ursa Major. Lsi driver download for windows.

The inner disc is rotated so that the mark for the chosen reference star points to the current date on the outer disc. The north star is sighted through the center of the device, and the pointer arm is rotated to point at the chosen reference star. The intersection of the pointer arm with the hour markings on the inner disc indicates the time. The instrument must be held upright, and should have a handle or similar hint as to which direction is down.

It is not possible to convert the local time to a standard time such as UTC without accurate knowledge of the observer's longitude. Similarly, it is not possible to determine longitude unless the observer also knows the standard time from a chronometer.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

Nocturneleague

  1. ^Farre i Olive E., (1996): La Sphaera Horarum Noctis de Ramon Llull, 'La Busca de Paper' n. 22, Primavera, p. 3-12 (edicion bilingue)
  2. ^Raimon Lull, Liber Principorum medicinae in Opera omnia, vol.1, Chap. 36, par.30, Mainz, 1721; Earlier Lull mentions the nocturnal in his Nova geometria (1299).
  3. ^Harriet Wynter and Anthony Turner, Scientific Instruments, Studio Vista, 1975, ISBN0-289-70403-0

External links[edit]

Nocturnal Animals

  • British Museum – Nocturnal from an astrological compendium
  • Simulation – Video and description, also, many devices
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nocturnal_(instrument)&oldid=1016521095'




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