Cassini's Model

Introduction

In the 17th Century, everyone assumed that the atmosphere terminated abruptly in a smooth surface where it met “the æther,” just like the smooth surface where still water meets the “subtler” medium of air. (The æther was supposed to be subtler still than air; so, why not? The gas laws were not known.) This picture of a homogeneous layer of air surrounding the Earth goes back at least to a work on optics attributed to Ptolemy, which says that “at the surface between air and ether, there is a refraction of the visual ray according to the difference in density between these two media.”

This view had been explicitly adopted by Kepler in his failed attempt to understand refraction, and it was adopted by Giovanni Domenico Cassini as well.

Unlike Kepler, Cassini knew the sine law of refraction. And it was a simple exercise in elementary trigonometry for him to apply it to the uniform atmosphere, thus making the first quantitative model for astronomical refraction.

The Model

Cassini's model is so simple that anyone who had trigonometry in high school can follow it. Here's how it works:

Ray diagram In the diagram at the left, the heavy arc represents the surface of the Earth, with radius R and center at C, and the thinner arc at a height h above it is the surface of the (uniform) atmosphere. The observer at O sees a star (off to the right somewhere) at apparent zenith distance z0, in the direction of the dashed line.

The ray OP from the star entered the atmosphere at the point P. Because the local vertical there is in the direction from C to P, which is different from the local vertical through O, the ray meets the vertical at P at an angle z1, which is less than z0.

Because of the refraction that occurs at P, the ray direction outside the atmosphere is different: the ray meets the local vertical there at an angle z2, which is bigger than z1. If the refractive index of air is n, the law of refraction tells us that

n sin z1 =  sin z2 .

So much for the law of refraction. The nice thing is that we can calculate the sine of z1 from the sine of the observed zenith distance, z0 .  If you recall the Law of Sines for plane triangles, and apply it to the triangle OPC, you'll see that

sin z1/ sin (angle COP)  =  R/(R+h) .

But the sine of the angle COP is the same as the sine of its supplement, z0 .  So we have:

sin z1/ sin z0 =  R/(R+h) ,

or

sin z1[R/(R+h)] sin z0 .

Now that we have sin z1 , the law of refraction gives us sin z2 :

sin z2 =  n sin z1[nR/(R+h)] sin z0 .

and consequently

z2 =  arcsin {[nR/(R+h)] sin z0} .

But (as you can see from the diagram above) the refraction, r, is just the difference of these two angles:

r =  z2 −  z1 .

So, because we already had an expression for sin z1 a few lines above:

r =  arcsin {[nR/(R+h)] sin z0}  −  arcsin {[R/(R+h)] sin z0} .

That's it! We're done. This is Cassini's refraction model.

Copyright © 2003 – 2006, 2012 Andrew T. Young


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