What's New Under The Sun

Thursday, 28 May 2026 22:31

A wonderful trio of solar eclipses on the Iberian Peninsula will occur.  The first will occur on 12 August 2026 with viewing time of more than 2 minutes. lThe second, almost exactly a year later on 2 August 2027, will be even more spectacular, with an eclipse duration of 4 minutes.  On 26 January 2028 Spain will encounter an annular solar eclipse, creating a view of the rim of the sun...

Thursday, 07 May 2026 20:28

In August, 2009 the NASS Conference was held in Portland, Oregon and visited the sundial at Clark College in Vancouver, WA.  The equatorial sundial, built in 1984, had just received a new gnomon: an analemmatic or "bowling pin" gnomon that corrects for the Equation of Time. On May 4th, 2026 the local newspaper of Clark County, the Columbian, reported that more than 40 years after its...

Tuesday, 21 April 2026 16:47

Heritage Auctions of Dallas, Texas, is auctioning a brass dial signed by "Patrick Hepburn, Marlborough, Maryland, 1720"..  The dial face has a rich green patina with rough but accurate engraving of Roman numeral hours, delineated with half, quarter and eighth hour marks. The dial has an eight point compass rose with lettered points.  Latitude is engraved as "LATT 39".The wide, but...

Sunday, 12 April 2026 21:30

Do you wonder what a Bifilar Sundial is? Or a Campbell-Stokes Recorder? Maybe you are studying facts about astrolabes and come across the word almucantar.  Are they rings in the sky? Our perhaps you want to make a vertical dial and need the trigonometric formula to draw the hour lines and have forgotten where to look.  All of these questions can be answered plus internet and NASS...

Monday, 06 April 2026 01:08

The Times Colonist in an article of March 28, 2026 by Hannah Link, reports that as of November 2026, British Columbia will change to permanent daylight time.  "That means sundials in B.C. will always be one hour behind, no matter the time of year, said Victoria-based sundial enthusiast Steve Lelievre." Photo: Times Colonist - The sun shines on the Sundial Garden in Beacon Hill...

Monday, 09 March 2026 15:10

Building on the success of the 2025 inaugural event celebrating world sundial day on March 20th, 2026. This global online gathering celebrates sundials, timekeeping, astronomy, history, art, mathematics, craftsmanship, and cultural heritage across the world. World Sundial Day was originally created by Esteban Martínez Almirón on his website Reloj Andalusí. World Sundial Day is celebrated...

Thursday, 22 January 2026 18:30

UPDATE:  We will have a special tour of the Kentucky Viet Nam Memorial Sundial.  See the attachment about the construction of this wonderful memorial. Get ready to travel. This year the 31th NASS annual conference will be held in Louisville, KY at the Hyatt Regency Hotel June 25th - June 28th. The conference starts Thursday June 25th at 4:30pm with an opening reception, introductions,...

Monday, 13 October 2025 22:49

On October 4, 2025 Madison Historical Society of Ohio was able to have their sundial returned after 32 years, when in 1993 it was moved to the lawn of Lake County Courthouse to reduce the chance of vandalism. The sundial was originally placed at Madison Home 100 years ago on Saturday, October 24, 1925 during a conference of the Women's Relief Society.  From 1904 to 1962 the state ran this...

Monday, 15 September 2025 19:42

NASS is pleased to announce the upcoming fifth instance of Elements of Dialing, our introductory course about sundials, their history, and the science that makes them work. The free 12-lesson course, intended for those are new to sundialing, runs from 27 October 2025 until 26 April 2026. The course instructor is Robert Kellogg, NASS Vice President and Sundial Registrar.  Bob will be...

Thursday, 11 September 2025 23:11

A Hungarian born American scientist, Mária Telkes (1900-1995), was called "The Sun Queen" and among other honors, was postmousthly inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame. She lived to 95 and for most of her life developed solar power in a variety of forms. Trained as a biophysicist, she worked for Westinghouse Electrical and Manufacturing Company in Pittsburgh, PA, where she...

Thursday, 28 August 2025 23:25

The annual NASS Conference was held 7-10 August, 2025 in Ottawa.  As usual, the conference began late Thursday afternoon with an introduction social and a "grab bag give away", taking your chances with tickets to win the bag's prize.  Will Grant was the final winner of the Walton Double Planar Polar Sundial, but Paul Ulbrich beat the statistic odds and won this prize three times,...

Tuesday, 10 June 2025 18:51

  Prosciutto di Portici (Ham) Sundial Photo: Getty Images The Prosciutto di Portici Sundial, more often called the Portici Ham Sundial, dates from the first century somewhere between  8 BCE to 79 CE.  This small silvered bronze dial was uncovered on 11 June, 1755 in the ruins of Herculaneum (current day Portici) in the "Villa of the Papyri", buried in...

This Sundials for Starters appeared in The Comendium in June 2010

by Robert Kellogg, Ph.D.

Some years ago I had the thrill of reading the Tiberius manuscript1, which in Old English presented a horologium, a set of shadow lengths, from somewhere in England. The shadow lengths were given throughout the year, such as on Christ’s Mass day where “the shadow at [mid] morning and nine [halfway through the afternoon] is twenty [less] a heel foot and at midday four and twenty.” 

1 MS Cotton Tiberius A, iii – folio 179 o/v British Museum, Manuscript Library

Fig. 1 shows the midday lengths of the horologium plotted against the day of year, showing that the monastery was somewhere near 53o latitude. 

I was re-reading J.L. Heilbron’s book The Sun in the Church: Cathedrals as Solar Observatories [1999, Harvard University Press] and realized one thousand years later the Church still measuring the noonday sun with precision. In fact, by the 16th century, the date of Easter and the vernal equinox had slipped by around eleven days. Pope Gregory had decided on reforming the date of Easter in 1577 and by 1580 received recommendations of skipping a leap year every 400 years from his commission on the calendar.

How do you measure the length of the year or the tilt of the sun’s obliquity? With patience. Egnazio Danti mounted a quadrant on the face of Santa Maria Novella Cathedral in 1574 to measure the length of the year in support Pope Gregory XIII’s calendar reform. Not long after he proposed a larger instrument for the Florentine cathedral: a Meridiana, a meridian line where a noonday sunspot on the floor could mark the changing seasons. Danti knocked a hole in the south façade of Santa Maria Novella 21.3 meters above the floor to let the sunlight fall into the church.

According to Heilbron, “Danti expected that the sun’s noon image on the day of the first vernal equinox after he completed his meridiana would be centered at a point close to 22.37 meters from the façade (‘close to’ because the equinox can occur at any time of the day). It would then move south [as the sun moved toward summer and appeared higher in the sky] coming to within 10.36 meters of the front wall on mid-summer day; recede toward the equinoctial position; continue beyond it a long way, to 57.96 meters [at the base of the choir stalls] on midwinter day; and move once again toward the equinoctial station…thus [Danti] said it would be easy to find the year and the true time of Easter.” Unfortunately, the meridiana was not completed due to a change in Church politics: Danti was exiled from Florence two weeks after the autumnal equinox of 1575.

Danti was not deterred and convinced the council of church maintainers in Bologna that San Petronio was an ideal candidate for a meridiana. Danti made a hole 65’ 9” in Bolognese measure above the pavement, as shown in Fig. 2. In the late 16th century the sun’s obliquity was 23.50o, about a tenth of a degree greater than it is today. At latitude 44o 30’ the angle of the sun on the floor of San Petronio changes from only 17 at winter solstice to 64o at summer solstice.

Unfortunate for Danti, support pillars of the cathedral were in the way and he had to compromise by putting the meridiana nine degrees off north.

Danti’s meridiana were neither the first nor the last that would be built. Perhaps the most famous was Brunelleschi’s masterpiece dome of Santa Maria del Fiore, where in 1475 Toscanelli poked a hole in it 90 meters from the ground. At such a great height, the sun’s image is only visible near the summer solstice where Toscanelli attempted to measure changes in the inclination of the earth’s tilt (the obliquity). However, meridiana alignments depend not only on celestial mechanics, they depend upon the integrity and stability of the church’s own structure. Heilbron notes: “Indeed, the architects and engineers responsible for the maintenance of the cathedral read the meridiana to determine the state of the building, not of the ecliptic, while a few astronomers tried to use it for its original purpose.”

In Rome in 1580 Danti was busy creating a set of maps of the world (mappamundo) for the Pope at Belvedere. At Belvedere, Pope Gregory built a Torre dei Venti, a tower of the winds. “On the top floor of the tower, beneath the wind gauge [an anemoscope to measure the direction and speed of the wind], Danti inscribed a meridian line…The line itself indicates the position of the sun’s image at entry into the zodiacal signs from Cancer only down to Scorpio/Pisces, the room being too small to admit the images for Sagittarius/Aquarius and Capricornus. To fix the position of Cancer, Danti used the value of = 23o 29’… According to an old story, Danti’s demonstration to Gregory in the Torre dei Venti that the equinox occurred on 11 March rather than on the canonical 21st convinced the Pope of the need to reform the calendar. In fact, Gregory had decided on the reform in principle in 1577 and had received the report of his special commission on the calendar in 1580, before Danti’s line went down in the Torre dei Venti.” But it makes a good story.

Nearly 100 years after Danti’s meridiana at San Petronnio in Bologna, Giovanni Domenico Cassini (the first of the Cassini dynasty to rule the Paris Observatory for over a century) created a new meridiana in the Basilica. Creating a new south wall and properly aligning the meridian line north-south (Fig. 3) …at a cost of 2,500 lire.

And sometimes fiction gets in the way of truth. In the Da Vinci Code, Dan Brown gives the merdian line of Saint Sulpice as the Paris Meridian of zero-longitude. As with the other meridiana, this one too was used to determine the winter solstice and Easter.

Here are some famous Meridiana, their constructors and their cathedrals:

 

1475 Paolo Toscanelli Santa Maria de Fiore Florence
1576 Egnatio Danti Basilica of San Petronio Bologna
1580 Egnatio Danti Torre dei Venti Vatican
1665 Giovanni D. Cassini Basilica of San Petronio Bologna
1702 Francisco Bianchini Santa Maria degli Angeli Rome
1743 Le Monnier Saint Sulpice Paris
1776 Zanotti (rebuilder) Basilica of San Petronio Bologna
1780 Sempronio Pace Duomo (Cathedral) Fossombrone
1786 Cesaris, G. Reggio Duomo (Cathedral) Milan
1795 Giuseppe Piazzi Duomo (Cathedral) Palermo

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The obliquity of the ecliptic slowly changes, with a small nutation term thrown in for good measure. The mean obliquity can be calculated using a term we call Julian Centuries of 36525 days and the Julian Date as follows:

T = (jd – 2451545)/36525

where

T = number of Julian Centuries

jd = Julian date of interest ( and 2451545 = Julian date of 2000 Jan 1.5)

and computing the mean obliquity using the polynomial

o = 23.43929 - 0.013004167*T +1.6e-7 *T2 +5.036e-7*T3

In addition to the mean obliquity, there is a more rapid nutation term with a period of about 34 years. This is sometimes referred to as the obliquity correction, :

= 125.04 – 1934.136*T

 = 0.00256*cos()

and the total obliquity becomes

= o + 

 

Appendix: Interesting Web Sites for Meridiana

An Angelic Line in Rome: http://www.perillos.com/rome_line.html

Obliquity Applet: http://www.jgiesen.de/obliquity/index.html

La Meridiana of San Petronio http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sXTEMf6ahAc

Meridian of Milan Cathedral http://www.jgiesen.de/meridian/milan/index.html

Meridian of Fossombrone

http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Gazetteer/Places/Europe/Italy/Marche/Pesaro_e_Urbino/Fossombrone/Fossombrone/churches/Duomo/interior/meridiana.html

Meridian of S.M. degli Angeli

http://www.santamariadegliangeliroma.it/paginamastersing.html?codice_url=La_Meridana&lingua=ITALIANO&ramo_home=La_Meridiana