Ecliptic Coordinate System
The
ecliptic coordinate system
is a
celestial coordinate system
that uses the
ecliptic
for its
fundamental plane
. The ecliptic is the path that the
sun
appears to follow across the sky over the course of a year. It is also the
projection
of the Earth's
orbital plane
onto the
celestial sphere
. The
latitudinal
angle is called the
ecliptic latitude
, and the
longitudinal
angle is called the
ecliptic longitude
. Like
right ascension
in the
equatorial coordinate system
, the
zeropoint
of the ecliptic longitude is the
vernal equinox
. Such a coordinate system can be useful for charting solar system objects. Each of the planets (except
Pluto
)
orbits
the sun in roughly the same plane, so they always appear to be somewhere near the ecliptic (i.e., they always have small ecliptic latitudes).
This article originates from Jason Harris' Astroinfo which comes along with
KStars
, a Desktop Planetarium for
Linux
/
KDE
. See http://edu.kde.org/kstars/index.phtml
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