NAME
Astro::Montenbruck::Ephemeris::Planet::Pluto - Pluto.
SYNOPSIS
use Astro::Montenbruck::Ephemeris::Planet::Pluto;
my $planet = Astro::Montenbruck::Ephemeris::Planet::Pluto->new();
my @geo = $planet->position($t); # apparent geocentric ecliptical coordinates
DESCRIPTION
Child class of Astro::Montenbruck::Ephemeris::Planet, responsible for calculating Pluto position.
The coordinates are first calculated relative to the fixed ecliptic of 1950, and then transformed to the equinox of date. This method is nesessary because of the high inclination of Pluto's orbit.
CAVEATS
The routine is applicable only between years 1890 and 2100.
The reason for this is that the series expansion used was not derived from
perturbation theory, but from a Fourier analysis of a numerically integrated
ephemeris covering this period of time. Even a few years before 1890 or after
2100, the errors in the calculated coordinates grow very sharply, reaqching
values of more than 0.5 arc-degrees.
— O.Montenbruck, Th.Pfleger "Astronomy on the Personal Computer"
METHODS
Astro::Montenbruck::Ephemeris::Planet::Pluto->new
Constructor.
$self->heliocentric($t)
See description in Astro::Montenbruck::Ephemeris::Planet.
AUTHOR
Sergey Krushinsky, <krushi at cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2009-2022 by Sergey Krushinsky
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.