This article is about the astronomical concept. For other uses of the word, see Meridian.
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In the sky, a meridian is an imaginary great circle on the celestial sphere. It passes through the north point on the horizon, through the celestial pole, up to the zenith, through the south point on the horizon, and through the nadir, and is perpendicular to the local horizon.
Because it is fixed to the local horizon, stars will appear to drift past the local meridian as the earth spins. You can use an object's right ascension and the local sidereal time to determine when it will cross your local meridian, or culminate (see hour angle).
The upper meridian is the half above the horizon, the lower meridian the half below it.
See also
- Meridian (geography)
- Prime Meridian
- Principal meridian
- Meridian lines used with a gnomon to measure solar elevation and time of year
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