Besselian equinoxes and epochs A Besselian epoch, named after German mathematician and astronomer
Friedrich Bessel (1784–1846), is an epoch that is based on a
Besselian year of 365.242198781 days, which is a
tropical year measured at the point where the
Sun's longitude is exactly 280°. Since 1984, Besselian equinoxes and epochs have been superseded by
Julian equinoxes and epochs. The current standard equinox and epoch is
J2000.0, which is a Julian epoch. Besselian epochs are calculated according to: :B =
1900.0 + (
Julian date − 2415020.31352) / 365.242198781 The previous standard equinox and epoch were
B1950.0, a Besselian epoch. Since the
right ascension and
declination of stars are constantly changing due to
precession, astronomers always specify these with reference to a particular equinox. Historically used Besselian equinoxes include B1875.0, B1900.0, B1925.0 and B1950.0. The official constellation boundaries were defined in 1930 using B1875.0.
Julian equinoxes and epochs A Julian epoch is an epoch that is based on
Julian years of exactly 365.25 days. Since 1984, Julian epochs are used in preference to the earlier Besselian epochs. Julian epochs are calculated according to: :J = 2000.0 + (
Julian date − 2451545.0)/365.25 The standard equinox and epoch currently in use are
J2000.0, which corresponds to January 1, 2000, 12:00
Terrestrial Time.
J2000.0 The J2000.0 epoch is precisely
Julian date 2451545.0 TT (
Terrestrial Time), or January 1, 2000, noon TT. This is equivalent to January 1, 2000, 11:59:27.816
TAI or January 1, 2000, 11:58:55.816
UTC. Since the
right ascension and
declination of stars are constantly changing due to
precession, (and, for relatively nearby stars due to
proper motion), astronomers always specify these with reference to a particular epoch. The earlier epoch that was in standard use was the
B1950.0 epoch. When the
mean equator and equinox of J2000 are used to define a celestial reference frame, that frame may also be denoted J2000 coordinates or simply J2000. This is different from the
International Celestial Reference System (ICRS): the mean equator and equinox at J2000.0 are distinct from and of lower precision than ICRS, but agree with ICRS to the limited precision of the former. Use of the "mean" locations means that
nutation is averaged out or omitted. This means that the Earth's rotational North pole does not point quite at the J2000
celestial pole at the epoch J2000.0; the true pole of epoch nutates away from the mean one. The same differences pertain to the equinox. The "J" in the prefix indicates that it is a Julian equinox or epoch rather than a Besselian equinox or epoch.
Equinox of Date There is a special meaning of the expression "
equinox (and ecliptic/equator)
of date". This reference frame is defined by the positions of the ecliptic and the celestial equator as of the date/epoch on which the position of something else (typically a
solar system object) is being specified.
Other equinoxes and their corresponding epochs Other equinoxes and epochs that have been used include: • The
Bonner Durchmusterung started by
Friedrich Wilhelm August Argelander uses B1855.0 • The
Henry Draper Catalog uses
B1900.0 •
Constellation boundaries were defined in 1930 along lines of
right ascension and
declination for the B1875.0 epoch. • Occasionally, non-standard equinoxes have been used, such as B1925.0 and B1970.0 • The
Hipparcos Catalog uses the
International Celestial Reference System (ICRS) coordinate system (which is essentially equinox J2000.0) but uses an epoch of J1991.25. For objects with a significant
proper motion, assuming that the epoch is J2000.0 leads to a large position error. Assuming that the equinox is J1991.25 leads to a large error for nearly all objects. •
Gaia catalogues similarly provide star coordinates valid in the ICRS coordinate system, but the epoch is different for each data release. The reference epoch for DR1 is J2015.0, for DR2 it is J2015.5, and for DR3 it is J2016.0. Epochs and equinoxes for
orbital elements are usually given in
Terrestrial Time, in several different formats, including: •
Gregorian date with 24-hour time: 2000 January 1, 12:00 TT • Gregorian date with fractional day: 2000 January 1.5 TT •
Julian day with fractional day: JDT 2451545.0 •
NASA/
NORAD's
Two-line elements format with fractional day: 00001.50000000 ==Sidereal time and the equation of the equinoxes==