STADIA INTERVAL.— As you look at a stadia rodthrough a transit telescope, the stadia hairs seem tointercept an interval on the rod. The distance on the rodbetween the apparent positions of the two stadia hairs isthe stadia interval or stadia reading.Usually, you determine stadia intervals by sightingthe lower stadia hair at a convenient foot mark andthen observing the position of the upper stadia hair;for example, the lower hair might be sighted on the2.00 foot mark and the upper hair might be in linewith 6.37. By subtracting, we have the stadia reading(6.37 -2.00 = 4.37).It may happen that the stadia reading is more thanthe length of the rod. By using the middle hair, you mayobserve a half-interval and multiply it by 2 to get thestadia reading.STADIA CONSTANT.— Light rays that passthrough the lens (objective) of a telescope come togetherat a point called the principal focus of the lens. Thenthese light rays continue in straight-line paths, as shownin figure 8-3.The distance between the principal focus and thecenter of the lens is called the focal length(f) of the lens.For any particular lens, the focal length does not change.If you divide the focal length by the distance betweenthe stadia hairs (i), you get a number known as the stadiaconstant (k). Sometimes the stadia constant is called thestadia factor or stadia interval factor.A convenient value to use for the stadia constant is100. Stadia hairs usually are spaced so that the intervalbetween them will make the stadia constant equal to100.STADIA DISTANCE.— The distance from theprincipal focus to the stadia rod is called the stadiadistance. As shown in figure 8-3,this distance (d) isFigure 8-3.—Light rays converge at principal focus of a lens.equal to the stadia constant (k) times the stadia reading(s).INSTRUMENT CONSTANT.— The distancefrom the center of the instrument to the principal focusis the instrument constant. Usually, this constant isdetermined by the manufacturer of the instrument. Youshould find it stated on the inside of the instrument box.Externally focusing telescopes are manufactured sothat the instrument constant may be considered equal to1. For internally focusing telescopes, though, theobjective in the telescope is so near the center of theinstrument that the instrument constant may beconsidered as zero. This, as you will learn in thefollowing discussion of stadia reduction formulas, is adistinct advantage of internally focusing telescopes.Most modem instruments are equipped with internallyfocusing telescopes.STADIA REDUCTION FORMULAS.— In stadiawork we are concerned with finding two values asfollows: (1) the horizontal distance from the center ofthe instrument to the stadia rod and (2) the verticaldistance, or difference in elevation, between the centerof the instrument and middle-hair reading on the rod. Toobtain these values, you must use stadia reductionformulas.Stadia Formula for Horizontal Sights.— For ahorizontal sight, the distance that we need to determineis the horizontal distance between the center of theinstrument and the stadia rod. This distance is found byadding the stadia distance to the instrument constant asfollows:Write ks for the stadia distance and (f + c) for theinstrument constant. Then the formula for computinghorizontal distances when the sights are horizontalbecomes the following:Where:h=k=s=f + c =f =c=horizontal distance from the center of theinstrument to a vertical stadia rodstadia constant, usually 100stadia intervalinstrument constant (zero for internallyfocusing telescopes; approximately 1 footfor externally focusing telescopes)focal lengths of the lensdistance from the center of the instrument tothe center of the lens8-4
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