We modified J. G. Williams' formulation of the precession and the nutation
by using the 3-1-3-1 rotation
[1] so as to express them in an arbitrary
inertial frame of reference. It gives the precession-nutation matrix as
the product of four rotational matrices as
NP = R1(-ε)·R3·(-ψ)·R1·(φ)·R3·(γ)
and the precession one similarly as
P = R1(-ε)·R3·(-ψ)·R1·(φ)·R3·(γ) .
Here φ and &gamma are the angles to specify the location of the ecliptic pole
of date in the given inertial frame, ψ and
ψ are the true and mean ecliptic angles
of precession, respectively, and ψ and
ψ are the true and mean obliquities of the
ecliptic, respectively. As a result, the pole coordinates of the true and mean
equators are explicitly given in terms of the newly introduced precession
angles. Although the expression of nutation matrix is unchanged, we recommend
the usage of the above form of
NP instead of preparing
P and
N separately,
because of faster evaluation. The formulation is robust in the sense it avoids
a singularity caused by finite pole offsets near the epoch. Facing the
singularity is inevitable in the current IAU formulation. By using a recent
theory of the forced nutation of the non-rigid Earth, SF2001
[2], we converted
the true pole offsets referred to the ICRF, observed by VLBI for 1979-2000,
and complied by USNO, to the offsets in the above three angles of precession,
ψ,
φ and
γ
, while we fixed
ε as the combination of the linear part provided in SF2001 and
the quadratic and higher terms derived by Williams (1994). From the converted
offsets, we determined the best-fit polynomial expressions of the three
precession angles in the ICRF by a weighted least square method where we kept
the quadratic and cubic terms as the same as in Williams (1994). These
constitute a new set of fundamental expressions of the precessional quantities.
The combination of the new precession formula and the periodic part of SF2001
serves a good approximation of the precession-nutation matrix in the ICRF.
Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI), celestial mechanics, precession formula, precession-nutation matrix, rotational matrices, ecliptic pole, inertial frame, true and mean ecliptic angles of precession, true and mean obliquities of the ecliptic, pole coordinates of the true and mean equators, singularity caused by finite pole offsets near the epoch, nutation of the non-rigid Earth, least square method, precessional quantities.