A bifilar dial is a type of sundial invented by the German mathematician Hugo Michnik in 1922. It has two non-touching threads parallel to the dial. Usually the second thread is orthogonal-(perpendicular) to the first.The intersection of the two threads' shadows gives the local apparent time.
When the threads have the correctly calculated separation, the hour-lines on the horizontal surface are uniformly drawn. The angle between successive hour-lines is constant. The hour-lines for successive hours are 15 degrees apart.
The bifilar dial was invented in April 1922 by the mathematician and maths teacher, Hugo Michnik, from Beuthen, Upper Silesia. He studied the horizontal dial- starting on a conventional XYZ cartesian framework and building up a general projection which he states was an exceptional case of a Steiner transformation. He related the trace of the sun to conic sections and the angle on the dial-plate to the hour angle and the calculation of local apparent time, using conventional hours and the historic Italian and Babylonian hours. He refers in the paper, to a previous publication on the theory of sundials in 1914.[1]
His method has been applied to vertical near-declinant dials, and a more general declining-reclining dial.
Work has been subsequently done by Dominique Collin.
This was the dial that Hugo Michnik invented and studied. By simplifying the general example so:
h2=h1\sin\varphi
The first wire
f1
h1
\Pi
f2
h2
\Pi
f2
f1
In this proof
\varphi
Respectively,
(lD1)
(lD2)
f1
f2
\Pi
Point
O
The X-axis is the east–west line passing through the origin. The Y-axis is the north–south line passing through the origin. The positive Y direction is northward.
t\odot
\delta
xI
yI
I
\Pi
\begin{matrix} xI&=&h1
\sint\odot | |
\sin\varphi \operatorname{tan |
\delta + \cos\varphi\cost\odot}\\ & & \\ yI&=&h2
-\cos\varphi \operatorname{tan | |
\delta + |
\sin\varphi\cost\odot}{\sin\varphi \operatorname{tan}\delta + \cos\varphi\cost\odot} \end{matrix}
Eliminating the variable
\delta
xI
yI
\varphi
t\odot
xI | |
yI+h2/\operatorname{tan |
\varphi}=
h1\sin\varphi | |
h2 |
\operatorname{tan}t\odot
C
<math>x_C = 0\,</math>
<math>y_C = -h_2 / \operatorname{tan}\varphi</math>
In other words, point C is south of point O (where the wires intersect), by a distance of <math>h_2 / \operatorname{tan}\varphi</math>
, where
\varphi
h2
h1
<math>h_2 = h_1 \sin\varphi\quad </math>
then the equation for the hour lines can be simply written as:
xI-xC | |
yI-yC |
=\operatorname{tan}t\odot
I
\Pi
\widehat{OCI}
t\odot
So provided the sundial respects the la condition
h2=h1\sin\varphi
C
A London dial is the name given to dials set for 51° 30' N. A simple London bifilar dial has a dial plate with 13 line segments drawn outward from a centre-point C, with each hour's line drawn 15° clockwise from the previous hour's line. The midday line is aligned towards the north.
The north–south wire is 10 cm (
h1
h2
h2
Whether a sundial is a bifilar, or whether it's the familiar flat-dial with a straight style (like the usual horizontal and vertical-declining sundials), making it reclining, vertical-declining, or reclining-declining is exactly the same. The declining or reclining-declining mounting is achieved in exactly the same manner, whether the dial is bifilar, or the usual straight-style flat dial.
For any flat-dial, whether bifilar, or ordinary straight-style, the north celestial pole has a certain altitude, measured from the plane of the dial.