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Prime Meridian

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The Prime Meridian, also known as the International Meridian or Greenwich Meridian, is the meridian (line of longitude) passing through the Royal Greenwich Observatory, Greenwich, England — it is the meridian at which longitude is defined to be 0 degrees. The prime meridian, and the opposite 180th meridian (at 180° longitude), which the International Date Line generally follows, separate the Eastern and Western Hemispheres.

Unlike the parallels of latitude, which are defined by the rotational axis of the Earth (the poles being 90° and the Equator, 0°), the prime meridian is arbitrary, and multiple meridians have been used through history as the prime meridians of various mapmaking systems (including four different Greenwich meridians). The Greenwich Meridian established by Sir George Airy in 1851 was agreed upon as the international standard in October 1884. At the behest of U.S. President Chester A. Arthur, 41 delegates from 25 nations met in Washington, D.C., USA, for the International Meridian Conference. France abstained when the vote was taken, and French maps continued to use the Paris Meridian for several decades.

Heading south from the North Pole, the Prime Meridian passes through the following countries:

The zero meridian used by satellite navigation systems (on the WGS84 datum) is 102.5 metres (336.3 feet) to the east of the line marked at Greenwich.<ref>History of the Prime Meridian -Past and Present</ref> The plane of this geodetic meridian passes through the centre of the Earth, unlike the plane of the astronomical meridian which contains the direction of gravity (indicated by a plumb line) which points opposite to the direction of the zenith, to which astronomical instruments are aligned. The angle between these two meridian planes at the Royal Observatory, the east-west component of vertical deflection, is 5.31". The WGS84 datum is an average of the various continental drifts. As a result, the astronomical meridian through Airy's transit instrument drifts toward the east as it is carried by the European portion of the Eurasian tectonic plate, closer to the geodetic meridian, by about one centimetre per year.

The zero meridian used by the Ordnance Survey (OSGB36 datum) is about six metres to the west of the line marked at Greenwich. This was the standard meridian before 1851, and the Ordnance Survey simply continued to use it.

Universal Time is notionally based on the WGS84 meridian. However, the standard international time UTC can differ from the observed time on the meridian by up to about one second, because of changes in the earth's rotation. Leap seconds are inserted periodically to keep UTC in sync with the earth.

The Greenwich Meridian is now marked at night by a laser beam emitted from the observatory.[1]

One degree of longitude = (111.320 + 0.373sin²φ)cosφ km, where φ is latitude).<ref>P. Kenneth Seidelmann, ed., Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac (Mill Valley, Cal.: University Science Books, 1992) page 700.</ref>

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[edit] Other reference meridians

The meridian through Greenwich was selected as the Prime Meridian because over two-thirds of all ships and tonnage already used it as the reference meridian on their maps in 1884. Other reference meridians used previously include:

  • WGS84 longitude zero - 102.5 metres (336.3 feet) east of the traditional Prime Meridian
WGS84 longitudes have supplanted traditional ones. The offset at other locations can be as much as 30" east or west.

[edit] Other planetary bodies

The prime meridians of the following bodies in the Solar System have been defined:

  • The prime meridian of the Moon lies directly in the middle of the face of the moon visible from earth and passes near the crater Bruce.
  • The 20th meridian of Mercury is defined by a special small crater known as Hun Kal, which is Mayan for 20.
  • The prime meridian of Mars is defined by the crater Airy-0.

[edit] Reference

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[edit] External links

cs:Základní poledník de:Nullmeridian et:Algmeridiaan es:Meridiano de Greenwich fa:نصف‌النهار مبدأ fr:Méridien de Greenwich fy:Nulmeridiaan gl:Meridiano de Greenwich hr:Grinički meridijan is:Núllbaugur it:Meridiano di Greenwich he:קו גריניץ' lv:Griničas meridiāns nl:Meridiaan van Greenwich ja:グリニッジ子午線 pl:Południk zerowy pt:Meridiano de Greenwich sv:Nollmeridian vi:Kinh tuyến số 0 zh:本初子午線

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