An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World...

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An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al- Falak al-Shar’i ) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Sha’ban 1428 / 8 th September 2007 With the Name of Allah, All-Merciful, Most Merciful

Transcript of An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World...

Page 1: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shar’i)

Usama HasanIslamic Circles, Muslim World League,Saturday 25th Sha’ban 1428 /8th September 2007

With the Name of Allah, All-Merciful, Most Merciful

Page 2: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Who will benefit, in sha’ Allah

Students of Islamic law (Shari’ah) Students of mathematics, physics,

astronomy, etc. Mosque imams Mosque time-keepers (muwaqqits) Others …

Page 3: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Synopsis

1. Geometry and Motion of the Earth

2. Qiblah

3. Prayer Times

4. Moonsighting

Page 4: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

1 – The Geometry of the Earth

Latitude Longitude North Pole South Pole The Seasons

Page 5: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Motion of the Earth

The Earth spins on its axis once in 24 hours (from west to east): one day and night

The axis of the Earth’s spin is inclined at 23.5 deg to the direction of its motion around the Sun

Page 6: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

1a - Latitude

The Equator The Tropic of Cancer (23.5 deg N) The Tropic of Capricorn (23.5 deg S)

Local latitude is given by the altitude of the North Star (northern hemisphere only)

Page 7: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

1b - Longitude

The Greenwich Meridien Lines of longitude as time zones

360 deg / 24 = 15 deg The International [Solar] Date Line

(ISDL or IDL): 180 deg E / W

Page 8: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

1c – The Poles

At the North Pole, all directions are South At the South Pole, all directions are North The North Star (Pole Star, Polaris, al-najm

al-shimali, najm al-qutb) is directly above the North Pole

The Earth’s axis points to the North Star

Page 9: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

1d – The Seasons: Earth’s Annual Motion around the Sun

Page 10: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.
Page 11: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

The Seasons (cont’d)

At the Spring & Autumn equinoxes, the Sun is directly above the Equator

At the Winter Solstice, the Sun is directly above the Tropic of Capricorn

At the Summer Solstice, the Sun is directly above the Tropic of Cancer

(For northern hemisphere: vice-versa for the southern hemisphere)

Page 12: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

The Seasons – Implications for Shadow Lengths

Between the Tropics (i.e. in Tropical and Equatorial regions of the earth),there are times during the year when the Sun is directly overhead at noon Shadows sometimes disappear at noon

Outside the Tropics (north and south),the Sun is never directly overhead at noon Shadows never disappear at noon

Page 13: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Annual Motion of the Sun, Moon, Planets & Stars

“Lord of the Two Easts, Lord of the Two Wests!

So which of the favours of your Lord will you deny?”

(al-Rahman 55:17-18)

“Lord of the East(s) and West(s) …”(Muzzammil 73:9, Ma’arij 70:40)

Page 14: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Annual Motion of the Sun, Moon, Planets & Stars (Q. 55:17)

SE WN N

SUMMER SOLSTICE

WINTER SOLSTICE

EQUINOXES

Easts(Multiple, Two limits)

Wests(Multiple, Two limits)

Page 15: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Sunrise and Sunset

Season Sunrise direction

Sunset direction

Autumn East West

Winter SE SW

Spring East West

Summer NE NW

Page 16: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

2- Qiblah formulae !!!

For Istanbul:

Page 17: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Qiblah Direction: Great Circles

A “Great Circle” is a circumference of the Earth that has the centre of the Earth at its centre

All lines of longitude are Great Circles No line of latitude is a Great Circle,

except for the Equator, which is a GC There are many inclined Great Circles

Page 18: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Examples of Great Circles

Page 19: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Comparison of Great Circle Route and Loxodrome on the Mercator Projection.  The loxodrome is a line of constant heading, and the great circle, although appearing longer than the loxodrome, is actually the shortest route between New York and London.

Page 20: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Qiblah direction

The correct qiblah direction is always a “Great Circle” direction … unless you believe that the Earth is flat

E.g. from the USA, is the qiblah SE or NE ?

Page 21: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Tips for finding the qiblah - 1

Use The Plough and Polaris to determine North

In Somalia, Polaris tells us the qiblah!

Page 22: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Tips for finding the qiblah - 2

Use the direction of sunrise and sunset during the seasons

Page 23: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Tips for finding the qiblah - 3

At noon (zawal), the Sun is always: Due South if you are north of the

Tropic of Cancer Due North if you are south of the

Tropic of Capricorn Between the Tropics, it will be

overhead, N or S

Page 24: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Tips for finding the qiblah – 4(Khalid Shaukat): When the Sun is overhead at the Ka’bah: It is not advisable to determine the Qibla specially

for a Masjid using an ordinary compass. The following method which uses the sun is more reliable and accurate. It has been observed for centuries and reported in many books by Muslims around the world that two times a year the sun comes overhead above Ka'bah. This is observational fact for centuries, and is used to set the correct Qibla direction in places far from Makkah by Muslims for last so many centuries.

Those two dates and times are: May 28 at 12:18pm Local Civil Time at Makkah July 16 at 12:27pm Local Civil Time at Makkah

Page 25: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Tips for finding the qiblah – 4aLocal Time facing sun gives Qibla

PLACE May 28

July 16

Afghanistan 13:48   13:57

Bangladesh 15:18   15:27

Bosnia 11:18* 11:27*

Burma 15:18 15:27

Canada, Montreal 15:18* 5:27*

Egypt 11:18 11:27

France 11:18* 11:27*

Germany 11:18* 11:27*

India 14:48 14:57

Indonesia,Jakarta 16:18 16:27

Iran 13:48* 13:57*

Malaysia 17:18  17:27

Pakistan 14:18  14:27

Palestine 12:18* 12:27*

South Africa 11:18 11:27

United Kingdom 10:18* 10:27*

* means that these times are local Daylight Saving Times as observed in those countries.

This method applies at local Makkah noon between and around these two dates also, because Makkah is only two degrees from the Tropic of Cancer, i.e.

the method applies throughout May, June and July with good accuracy (UH)

Page 26: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Tips for finding the qiblah - 5

Use a compass or qiblah compass

Magnetic north is near true north Effect of metal / steel structures, e.g.

inside modern office/apartment blocks

Page 27: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Tips for finding the qiblah - 6

If all else fails … Most satellite dishes in UK point SE !

Hadith, “What is between the East and the West is the qiblah,” based on the ayah, “To Allah belongs the East and the West: wherever you turn, there is the Face of God.”

Page 28: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Daily Prayer Times (Solar)

Zuhr (Afternoon)

Asr (Late afternoon)

Maghrib (Sunset)

Isha (Night)Tahajjud (Late night)

Fajr (Dawn)

Duha (Forenoon)

“Establish the Prayer from the Decline of the Sun until the Darkness of the Night, and the Dawn Recitation …” (Qur’an, 17:78)

Page 29: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Fajr (Dawn)

False dawn, “like fox’s tail” True dawn Angle of Sun beneath horizon:

12-18 deg? 90-minute rule for the UK Impossible to calculate precisely?

Page 30: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Zuhr (Afternoon)

Immediately after Zawal (Noon)

Half-way between sunrise and sunset

Page 31: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

‘Asr (late afternoon)

When sun is lower, cooler, yellower

One- or two- shadows’ length?

Easiest way to determine: half-way between noon and sunset

Page 32: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Maghrib (Sunset)

When the whole of the sun’s disc disappears below the horizon

Calculations of sunset (and sunrise) have an error of 1-2 minutes either way because of refraction

Important for prayer and iftar !

Page 33: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

‘Isha (Night)

When the red or white twilight disappears

When it gets dark & the stars come out Angle of Sun beneath horizon:

12-18 deg? 90-minute rule for the UK Impossible to calculate precisely?

Page 34: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Tips on Prayer Times

Try not to use a watch or prayer timetable!

But if you must … Problem of Fajr / Isha time in the

Summer …

Page 35: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

4 - Moonsighting

Page 36: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

The Moon - Basic Facts The Earth travels around the Sun once every

365 days (and 6 hours) The Moon travels around the Earth once

every 29 ½ days A lunar year of 12 lunar months has 355 days

Phases of the moon result from parts of the Moon reflecting the Sun’s light towards the Earth

A lunar month has either 29 or 30 days (hadith)

Page 37: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Phases of the Moon

Page 38: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Looking for the New Crescent

Only visible after sunset Must wait for the sun’s glare to die down Experience shows that the best time to see

the crescent is about 20 minutes after sunset (when the sun is 5° below horizon)

Perfect timing if the Sunnah is followed (Salat al-Maghrib should be fairly short)

Look at the western horizon, near where the sun set

Page 39: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

The MOONWATCH Project Launched 1st Oct 2005 & will run for several

years (www.crescentmoonwatch.org) A mass-experiment for the UK public Part of Einstein Year (2005 is 100 years since

the publication of Relativity theory) Everyone is encouraged to look for the new

crescent every month and report their observations via the above website

Will help improve HM Nautical Almanac Office’s crescent-visibility calculations, in sha’ Allah

Page 40: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Moonsighting - History

The Islamic calendar is a purely lunar one Islam abolished the Pre-Islamic Arabian

method of intercalation Until relatively recently, the start of each

lunar month was determined purely by observation of the new crescent moon If cloudy, use a simple alternating 29/30 day rule

Communication constraints meant there was no controversy across the vast Muslim lands

Page 41: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Moonsighting – Islamic Law (1)

The Shari’ah (Sacred Law) covers all areas of life

Basic rule: crescent-sighting establishes the new month

Calculations: controversial; different views Cannot be used to determine new month Can be used to reject false crescent-sightings Can be used to determine new month

Page 42: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Moonsighting – Islamic Law (2) Applicability of a valid crescent-sighting:

two views that can be unified One view: ikhtilaf al-matali’ (“multiple

horizons”) Crescent-sighting applies only “locally” Nowadays: each state has its own horizon

Another view: ittihad al-matali’ (“unified horizons”) A single sighting applies for the whole (Muslim)

world

Page 43: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Background - Calculations Accurate calculations for the position of the

moon have been around for thousands of years E.g. solar and lunar eclipses

However, calculation of the visibility of the new crescent moon has only become significantly accurate over the last ~20 years Yallop, Ilyas, etc.

Usually, the moon needs to be 15-25 hours old before the crescent is visible Using conjunction (“astronomical birth”) means the

month will start one day too early

Page 44: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Calculating Crescent Visibility

Simple prediction rules have existed for millenia (ancient Babylon, Greece, classical Islam, e.g. al-Bayruni, etc.)

Modern criteria have been developed by: Bernard Yallop (ex-director of the Royal

Observatory Greenwich) Mohammad Ilyas (Malaysia) Schaefer (kept the details secret) Odeh (Jordanian Astronomical Society)

Page 45: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Calculating Crescent Visibility (2) Moonsighting.com is based on Yallop/Ilyas and

uses five factors only:

1. The angle between Sun and Moon2. The (angular) height of the Moon above the

horizon3. Earth-Moon distance4. Earth-Sun distance5. A measure of pollution in the atmosphere

Moonsighting.com’s predictions have proved accurate every month since 1994!

Page 46: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Crescent Visibility Curve – Tues 11 Sept 2007

Page 47: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Crescent Visibility Curve – Wed 12 Sept 2007 (eve of Ramadan 1428)

Page 48: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Crescent Visibility Curve – Thurs 13 Sept 2007

Page 49: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Towards a Unified Lunar Calendar

With accurate calculations of crescent-visibility, a worldwide lunar calendar is now possible (Ahmad Shakir, Qaradawi, Kamali, etc.)

There are 3 major possibilities:1. Use the visibility curve as an ILDL2. Fix everything wrt one place, e.g. Mecca3. Compromise: the Unified Hejra Calendar

(divide the world into three time zones)

Page 50: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Proposal 1: Crescent-Visibility curve as ILDL (International Lunar Date-Line)

1 Dhul Qa’dah 1426

30 Shawwal 1426

Page 51: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Proposal 2: Fix everything wrt one place, e.g. Makkah

Makkah

1 Dhul Qa’dah 1426

30 Shawwal 1426

Page 52: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Proposal 3: the Unified Hejra Calendar (www.icoproject.org)

Central Region

Western Region Eastern Region

Page 53: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Proposal 3: the Unified Hejra Calendar (www.icoproject.org)

Central Region

Western Region Eastern Region

For Dhul Qa’dah 1426, ILDL coincides with the Solar dateline

Page 54: An Introduction to Islamic Astronomy (al-Falak al-Shari) Usama Hasan Islamic Circles, Muslim World League, Saturday 25 th Shaban 1428 / 8 th September.

Links

www.crescentmoonwatch.org http://websurf.nao.rl.ac.uk UK_Islamic_Astronomy yahoogroup www.moonsighting.com www.jas.org.jo (Jordanian Astronomical

Society) www.icoproject.org (Islamic Crescent

Observation Project)