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8.2: Opposition, Conjunction and Quadrature

  • Page ID
    6834
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    Planets that are closer to the Sun than Earth (i.e. whose orbital radii are less than 1 AU), that is to say the planets Mercury and Venus, are inferior planets. (Any asteroids that may be found in such orbits are therefore inferior asteroids, and, technically, any spacecraft that are in solar orbits within that of the orbit of Earth could also be called inferior spacecraft, although it is doubtful whether this nomenclature would ever win general acceptance.) Other planets (i.e. Mars and beyond) are superior planets.

    In figure \(\text{VIII.1}\) I draw the orbits of Earth and of an inferior planet.

    Figure 8.1.png
    \(\text{FIGURE VIII.1}\)

    The symbol \(\odot\) denotes the Sun and \(\oplus\) denotes Earth. At \(\text{IC}|), the planet is at inferior conjunction with the Sun. At \(\text{SC}\), it is at superior conjunction with the Sun. At \(\text{GWE}\) it is at greatest western elongation from the Sun. At \(\text{GEE}\) it is at greatest eastern elongation. It should be evident that the sine of the greatest elongation is equal to the radius of the planet’s orbit in \(\text{AU}\). Thus the radius of Venus’s (almost circular) orbit is 0.7233 \(\text{AU}\), and therefore its greatest elongation from the Sun is about \(46^\circ\). Mercury’s orbit is relatively eccentric (\(e = 0.2056\)), so that its distance from the Sun varies from 0.3075 \(\text{AU}\) at perihelion to 0.4667 at aphelion. Consequently greatest elongations can be from \(18^\circ\) to \(28^\circ\), depending on where in its orbit they occur.

    In figure \(\text{VIII.2}\) I draw the orbits of Earth and of a superior planet.

    clipboard_e5cea0ae2a6c01e846b810c1f41cb465e.png
    \(\text{FIGURE VIII.2}\)

    At \(\text{C}\), the planet is in conjunction with the Sun. At \(\text{O}\) it is in opposition to the Sun. The opposition point is very familiar to observers of asteroids. Its right ascension differs from that of the Sun by 12 hours, and it transits across the meridian at midnight local solar time. The points \(\text{EQ}\) and \(\text{WQ}\) are eastern quadrature and western quadrature.


    This page titled 8.2: Opposition, Conjunction and Quadrature is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Jeremy Tatum via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform; a detailed edit history is available upon request.