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Celestial poleThe two celestial poles are the imaginary points where the Earth's spin axis intersects the celestial sphere.The sky appears to drift overhead from east to west, completing a full circuit around the sky in 24 (sideral) hours. This phenomenon is due to the spinning of the Earth on its axis. The Earth's spin axis intersects the celestial sphere at two points. These points are the celestial poles. As the Earth spins, they remain fixed in the sky, and all other points seem to rotate around them. The celestial poles are also the poles of the celestial equatorial coordinate system, meaning they have declinations of +90 degrees and -90 degrees (for the north and south celestial poles, respectively). The north celestial pole currently has nearly the same coordinates as the bright star Polaris (which is Latin for "Pole Star"). This makes Polaris useful for navigation: not only is it always above the North point of the horizon, but its altitude angle is always (nearly) equal to the observer's geographic latitude (however, Polaris can only be seen from locations in the Northern hemisphere). The fact that Polaris is near the pole is purely a coincidence. In fact, because of precession of the equinoxes, Polaris is only near the pole for a small fraction of the time.
This article originates from Jason Harris' Astroinfo which comes along with KStars, a Desktop Planetarium for Linux/KDE. See http://edu.kde.org/kstars/index.phtml know.html">know 'em--seen a lot of that sort of thing in my time. [He shakes
go/governor.html">governor----
But COKESON has come in through the outer office; brisk with
motioning SWEEDLE out, and closing the door] Quite a stranger! Must
down! Family well.html">well?
RUTH. Yes. I'm not living where I was.
COKESON. [Eyeing her askance] I hope.html">hope things are more comfortable at
if you'd done anything rash.
RUTH. I've/ve.html">ve/ve.html">ve kept the children with me.
COKESON. [Beginning to feel that things are not so jolly as ha had
young man, I suppose, since he came out?
RUTH. Yes, I ran across him yesterday.
COKESON. I hope he's well.
RUTH. [With sudden fierceness] He can't get anything to do. It's
[On his guard again] Didn't they find him a place when his time was
to be snubby.
RUTH. I can't bear his being like that.
COKESON. [Scanning her not unprosperous figure] I know his relations
till he finds his feet.
RUTH. Not now. I could have--but not now.
COKESON. I don't understand.
RUTH. [Proudly] I've seen him again--that's all over.
COKESON. [Staring at her--disturbed] I'm a family man--I don't want
they've never got over me marrying Honeywill. I never was waywise,
married him. I thought the world of him, of course . . . he used
you saw me.
RUTH. He used me worse than ever. He couldn't break my nerve, but I
couldn't stand that. I wouldn't go back now, if he were dying.
COKESON. [Who has risen and is shifting about as though dodging a
[There is silence]
COKESON. [Fascinated in spite of himself] Then there you were! And
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