
UIS5095315
The Prime Meridian at the Royal Observatory, Greenwich, London, 1914. Photograph of the building (centre) that houses Airy's Transit Circle installed at the Royal Observatory, Greenwich in 1850. Designed by the Astronomer Royal, George Biddell Airy (1801-1892), the instrument was used make observations on the north-south meridian. Used in conjunction with accurate timepieces, an observer would note the instance an object crossed the meridian. This was used to check the accuracy of timepieces and to determine the position of the stars, planets, Moon and Sun in the Sky. The instrument also defines zero degrees longitude and is therefore the prime meridian of the world. Agreed in 1885 at a Washington conference, the matter was determined by the predominance of the world's shipping using the Greenwich meridian for their nautical maps. ©SSPL/Science Museum
DC