Commit Graph

11 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Don Cross
1dcdb7780f Kotlin: true solar time demo 2023-02-12 19:30:35 -05:00
Don Cross
1a4f842764 Updated Ecliptic to return ECL in all languages. 2022-12-10 19:35:42 -05:00
Don Cross
8a153315cf Simplified and optimized nutation formula.
While trying to convert ecliptic coordinates from mean
equinox of date to true equinox of date, I ran into excessive
overhead from the IAU2000B nutation model. The fact that it
uses 77 trigonometric terms made the calculations a lot slower.

https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/pdfs/AD1112517.pdf
Page 4 in the above document mentions a shorter series
“NOD version 2” that has 13 terms instead of 77 as used in IAU2000B.
I had not noticed NOD2 before, because it appears only in
the FORTRAN version of NOVAS 3.x, not the C version.

After reading the FORTRAN code, I realized NOD2 is the same
as IAU2000B, only it keeps the first 13 of 77 terms.
The terms are already arranged in descending order of
significance, so it is easy to truncate the series.

Based on this discovery, I realized I could achieve all of
the required accuracy needed for Astronomy Engine by
keeping only the first 5 terms of the nutation series.
This tremendously speeds up nutation calculations while
sacrificing only a couple of arcseconds of accuracy.

It also makes the minified JavaScript code smaller:
Before: 119500 bytes.
After:  116653 bytes.

So that's what I did here. Most of the work was updating
unit tests for accepting slightly different calculation
results.

The nutation formula change did trigger detection of a
lurking bug in the inverse_terra functions, which convert
a geocentric vector into latitude, longitude, and elevation
(i.e. an Observer object). The Newton's Method loop in
this function was not always converging, resulting in
an infinite loop. I fixed that by increasing the
convergence threshold and throwing an exception
if the loop iterates more than 10 times.

I also fixed a couple of bugs in the `demotest` scripts.
2022-12-04 10:31:15 -05:00
Don Cross
e31be80497 Kotlin: reworked rise/set to work in polar regions 2022-11-13 19:25:44 -05:00
Don Cross
06b62887d2 Kotlin: obscuration for solar, lunar eclipses. 2022-10-20 17:31:21 -04:00
Don Cross
25adb13997 Kotlin demo: lunar eclipse prediction 2022-05-04 12:49:46 -04:00
Don Cross
bdb28eee2e Kotlin demo: rise/set/culmination
Added Kotlin demo to search for rise/set/culmination
of the Sun and Moon.

Enhanced the Time class to allow it to be
directly compared and sorted.
2022-05-03 21:09:56 -04:00
Don Cross
f32a922ddb Demo for Kotlin, Java: constellation 2022-05-03 16:50:11 -04:00
Don Cross
f670ae2127 Added Kotlin demo: jupiter_moons.
I had to add a new method `Vector.withTime` to work around
the error checking that throws an exception if vectors
from different times are added.

Also made Kotlin constants public:

    MINUTES_PER_DAY
    SECONDS_PER_DAY
    MILLISECONDS_PER_DAY
2022-05-02 14:57:16 -04:00
Don Cross
237bc42084 Added Kotlin demo: positions.
I also reworked how the Java and Kotlin demos
process errors in the command line arguments.
Using exceptions that are caught by main() rather
than directly exiting the process where the errors
are detected.
2022-05-02 11:28:16 -04:00
Don Cross
5cb273ceed Starting to add Kotlin demos.
Just like we have Java demos that use the Kotlin
version of Astronomy Engine, I want equivalent
demos in Kotlin.
2022-05-01 16:39:14 -04:00