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sci.astro.amateur |
>On Jul 1, 10:31 pm, Dave Typinski <möb...@trapezium.net> wrote:
>> Assuming an astronomical object is a member of a two-body system and
>> has a spin axis and an orbital plane, can the object's spin axis
>> precess around an axis /other/ than the normal to its orbital plane?
>> Doesn't seem likely, not with only two bodies.
>> Okay, add a few more bodies.
>> Take the Moon, for example. Its spin axis precesses about the normal
>> to its orbital plane.
>> Why couldn't its spin axis also precess around the normal to the
>> ecliptic?
>> Or does it, but to a very much smaller degree?
>> Is that what nutation is? A smaller and faster precession around some
>> other axis superposed on a somewhat larger and slower "main"
>> precession?
>To find out what precession can do, this Wikipedia article seems like
>a good one...
>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precession
>Since nutation, described on another Wikipedia article, is largely
>tied to the advance of the Moon's nodes, no doubt it is a response to
>the Moon's gravity even as ordinary precession is a response to the
>Sun's. It's probably simpler to combine the torques and get the
>resultant precession than to add precessions, though.