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L’Astronomo

The first Panerai watch with moon phases indication and polarised date.

L’Astronomo – Luminor 1950 Tourbillon Moon Phases Equation of Time GMT is the first of Officine Panerai’s creations to have moon phases indication and an innovative system using polarised crystal to indicate the date.
Innovation and high-quality watchmaking are combined in this new creation dedicated to the Florentine genius Galileo Galilei. A Luminor 1950 case, whose iconic design is part of the fascinating history of Officine Panerai, encloses a concentration of technical solutions which demonstrate the ability of the brand to interpret traditional complications in ways which are always distinctive, bringing innovation into the world of high-end sports watchmaking.

The first Panerai L’Astronomo, presented in 2010 on the occasion of the 400th anniversary of the celestial observations made by Galileo as a result of the invention of the telescope, was the first timepiece created by Panerai with a Tourbillon regulator, calendar, equation of time indication and the display of the times of Sunrise and Sunset.

Like its predecessor, the new L’Astronomo – Luminor 1950 Tourbillon Moon Phases Equation of Time GMT is made to order, and the Skeletonised movement, the P.2005/GLS (standing for Galileo Luna Scheletrato in Italian), is personalised to operate in accordance with the geographical coordinates of a place chosen by the client. It provides the same range of remarkable functions as the original L’Astronomo, and in addition, GMT and two other innovations: indication of the moon phases and an original system for displaying the date using polarised crystals.

SKY IN MOTION
THE MOON PHASE COMPLICATION
Thanks to the invention of the telescope, Galileo Galilei made revolutionary discoveries concerning the appearance and the movement of the moon.

He made remarkably beautiful drawings of what he saw with an accuracy and attention to detail which is still amazing even today. So, in a timepiece dedicated to him, nothing would be more logical than the moon phases indication, a classic complication of high-end watchmaking which Panerai has interpreted in its own way and with an accuracy of a century. On the back of the new L’Astronomo’s P.2005/GLS movement is a day/night indicator which also clearly displays the phases of the moon, by means of a system consisting of two superimposed discs which rotate in combination. The upper disc – which is read by a small external index fixed onto the movement – displays the 24 hours of the day, showing the sun during the hours of daylight and the stars of the sky at night. At the centre of the starry sky is a little round window through which the lower disc can be seen; on this appears the moon, its shape evolving day by day as a result of a small supplementary rotation of this disc of about 6.1° per day, a figure based on the exact duration of one lunar cycle (an average of 29 days, 12 hours, 44 minutes and 3 seconds).

Given that each watch movement is made according to the coordinates of a place chosen by the watch’s owner, the indication of the moon phases always relates to the sky above that place, and of course it also takes into account the difference between the earth’s northern and southern hemispheres.

Like the moon phases indicator, the indicators of Sunrise and Sunset times are connected to home time and therefore, if the owner of the watch should find himself in a city with a different time zone from that of the chosen city, these indicators will continue to show the situation at the time at home, which is indicated by the GMT hand.
Finally, at six o’clock is the linear indicator of the equation of time, which displays the difference between actual time (solar time) and conventional time on each day, this period ranging between plus 15 minutes and minus 15 minutes, according to the time of year.

NEW PANERAI PATENT
THE POLARISED CRYSTAL DATE
As well as the moon phases indicator, the hand-wound P.2005/GLS calibre also has the characteristic Panerai Tourbillon escapement, which can be admired both from the front as well as from the back of the watch thanks the sophisticated work of Skeletonising the movement and the absence of an actual dial.

All the elements which would be found in a traditional dial appear on the movement or the flange, and the three spring barrels, which store enough power to last at least four days, are visible through the open back, which also enables the power reserve indicator mounted on the movement to be read. In a watch with this construction, a date disc designed in the traditional way would to some extent conceal the fascination of the Skeletonised movement, because it would cover part of the components. The Laboratorio di Idee at the Panerai Manufacture in Neuchâtel has therefore designed an innovative system – exclusively patent pending by Panerai – in which the date disc is made of borosilicate glass and the numbers of the days have lasermodified optical properties. The numbers are virtually invisible in all positions except for the one that is aligned with the little date window, where a further polarised crystal, situated above the date disc, causes the number to appear so that it is perfectly legible.

THE TRUE AND THE MEAN SOLAR TIME
THE EQUATION OF TIME
Over a year, the time indicated by a watch with perfect timekeeping will differ from the time indicated by a sundial when the sun is at its zenith.

This difference ranges between -16 minutes 23 seconds and +14 minutes 22 seconds. This variation is called the Equation of Time and it can be calculated by trigonometric functions and empirical constants. It is indicated on the dial of L’Astronomo by a linear cursor positioned at 6 o’clock, which moves to display the current value of the equation of time. The equation of time indicates the difference between “true solar time” – when the sun is at its highest point in the sky – and “mean solar time” – the time as it is commonly understood, being the average of the “true day” over the year. The difference is caused by a combination of the elliptical rotation of the Earth around the Sun and the Earth’s inclination. The linear equation of time indicator displays this difference in time and it is set automatically when the date and the month are set on L’Astronomo.

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