Hi Paul,
Thanks for the question.
Strictly speaking, Argo Navis doesn't use a sidereal rate when SETUP REFRACTION is switched to ON. Since refraction raises the apparent position of an object as a function of elevation above the horizon, the tracking rates continually and dynamically change accordingly.
To use SETUP REFRACTION, ensure your time is set correctly and that your approximate location is set in SETUP LOCATION. Switch SETUP REFRACTION to ON.
The best way to understand what tracking rate is is use at any one time is as follows.
If the object comes from one of the internal Argo Navis catalogs and it is a solar system object, Argo Navis will provide the tracking rates inherent to that object.
SmartTrack(TM) in that instance kicks in and provides tracking rates inherent to the target object when you are within 5° radius of a satellite or 2.5° radius of any other type of solar system object.
The tracking rates for any non-solar system object are sky position based rather than object based per se.
What that means is that the tracking rates are calculated according to where the scope is pointing in an RA/Dec sense at any one instant, again making small corrections for refraction.
So if you were to point at a star, then internally Argo Navis fetches the stars RA/Dec position and uses those coordinates to compute the tracking rates. As you move a little away from that position, likewise the tracking rates, being the first differential of pointing with respect time, will change by tiny, tiny amounts accordingly. In other words, the tracking rates in this instance are following the sky rather than following the object. Since star and deep space objects have essentially fixed RA/Dec's with respect time (over the time scales we are dealing with here), the tracking rates for them will be correct.
With this in mind, when one uses the FROM PLANETARIUM feature, what gets transmitted from the planetarium program is just a raw RA/Dec position rather than any information about the target. Since Argo Navis cannot determine whether the FROM PLANETARIUM position happens to be a solar system object or not, it always applies inherent position based tracking rates. This is due to the fact that ASCOM has no support to convey target information, it only conveys target RA/Dec coordinates.
It is not possible to override the tracking rates using ASCOM. What's more, from its very design inception, ASCOM made what I thought was a poor choice in tracking rate support. What it should have done is simply support the ability to set or retrieve arbitrary tracking rates for both axis in terms of radians/second. Instead, the designers chose to support the notion of four rates which they designated sidereal, lunar, solar (for the Sun) and King (which refers to tracking rate corrections to attempt to correct for refraction that were published by Edward Skinner King in 1931 - archaic today).
So even if we wanted to support tracking of say Jupiter from a planetarium at its inherent rate, to the best of my knowledge ASCOM unfortunately does not support it.
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