Celestial is a complete package for celestial navigation on your iPad, iPhone or iPod Touch. It can perform celestial sight reductions, calculate fixes, present them visually, manage sights on multiple trips and assist in sight planning. It also includes a complete Almanac of the Sun, Moon, planets and stars. All this for the price of the Nautical Almanac for a single year!
In detail:
- Supports quick sight reduction. Enter all sight values to quickly calculate an intercept or to double-check your own manual sight reduction.
- Includes a comprehensive trip manager that allows you to manage sights taken during a trip. Keep your sights with you forever!
- Multiple sights can be grouped and averaged together and a fix can be calculated. Lines of Position (LOP's) and fixes can be plotted on a virtual plotting sheet.
- Running fixes are supported!
- Includes a star finder and times of rise/set phenomena. Plan your sights and be on deck when it is time.
- Includes the complete Almanac of the Sun, Moon, planets, 57 navigational stars, Aries and Polaris for the years 1980-2099.
- Context-sensitive screen help for every screen so you always know what the intended function of the software is.
- Night mode preserves your night vision.
All sight reduction algorithms are based on the algorithms described in the Nautical Almanac (Sight Reduction Procedures). Celestial object positions are predicted using software from the US Naval Observatory.
Visit http://navimatics.com or search for "navimatics" in the AppStore for additional navigation products.
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Celestial by Navimatics FAQ
Is Celestial by Navimatics free?
Celestial by Navimatics is not free (it costs 799.99), however it doesn't contain in-app purchases or subscriptions.
Is Celestial by Navimatics legit?
Not enough reviews to make a reliable assessment. The app needs more user feedback.
Thanks for the vote
How much does Celestial by Navimatics cost?
The price of Celestial by Navimatics is 799.99.
What is Celestial by Navimatics revenue?
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Is anyone writing these 5-star reviews even using this app? I have purchased almost all of the celestial navigation apps on the app store (except StarPilot - too expensive, especially in light of its bad reviews) and Celestial is the LEAST feature rich of them all.
First off, everything is done based on UTC time. Whenever you make another sight you have to do the conversion from the current time in your head before you enter it. It does have the function to automatically produce the current UTC which helps when entering an actual sight since you can get the current UTC and update to the minutes and seconds of your sight. Way more difficult when entering data for previous data. Also, the rise and set times are only displayed in UTC and you have to do the conversion in your head. The rise and set times were a few minutes off from the times you may find on the internet, but that is probably not a big deal.
More of a big deal is the accuracy of the sight reductions. I entered 2 sights of the Sun that I had previously made and reduced by hand. Since I had done this at my home and determined the correct fix to my location I know my results are correct.
The Ha and Ho values produced by Celestial matched my hand calculations, but the Hc was way off. I assume this difference was due to Celestial not calculating from an assumed position (which must be done when your are doing a reduction via table lookup) so I can’t compare it directly to my results. The plot of the sights looked similar to mine but there is not enough detail on the plot to estimate the fix from. The fix it calculated for me was off by more than 20nm. There are no details of how this was calculated, so not idea of why.
When entering a new sight, you start with no data and have to enter everything again. When doing multiple Sun sights (as most of us do), this is extra unnecessary work when the only thing that needs to change is the sextant altitude and time. In my case it led to an error since the limb defaults to “none” and I forgot to change it on the second sight I entered. It took time to go back and figure out my error.
One of the major things Celestial is missing is the ability to make a running fix. Are we suppose to stop the boat and take down the sails every time we want to make a fix? Another major omission is the ability to compute an expected altitude that can be used to set your sextant to before making a sight. Not a big deal for the Sun and Moon, but a very big
Excellent App
This app is an excellent value. I have been practicing celestial navigation for over 20 years and have programed calculators to provide almanac data and reduce sights. This app does everything you need. The Sky View feature is very nice and greatly facilitates sight planning. Touching the screen in the Sky View mode provides accurate HC and azimuth values for each body. The plotting function, however, needs improvement; the LOPs are on a small screen with a fixed scale spanning 120 NM. You can't see the area of intersection well enough to estimate the precision of the fix or identify which sights might be outliers and better deleted. Some kind of "pinch to expand" feature would be a big improvement and warrant five stars for the improved app.
The app does not have some of the nice bells and whistles like sight averaging, star ID from observed altitude and azimuth, or great circle sailing. If you want all that and more you should buy StarPilot, but it is more than twice the price. This app will serve your needs, provide plenty of practice and lots of fun, and, along with a sextant, enable a safe return from the longest voyage in the event space aliens zap all the GPS satellites. Actually, in that case you would need a chronometer too.
BridgeMan
Very usefull apps, fast and easy to use. It helps saving time for calculations, especially to officers like me working on tankers doing celestial navigation in long voyages. There's one more lacking in this program, must have a compass correctors or determining compass error. Hoping to have this updates guys to make this apps complete... I recommend this to a friend....
Great App!
I have been practicing celestial navigation since 1968 and have recently looking for a good application for my iPhone and iPad (even old horses sometimes learn new tricks). Celestial by Navimatics is well thought out and a snap to use after just a little practice; I look forward to using it on my next passage. I've run a bunch of star sights and sun line through the program and they all check out. There are a few tweaks and additions that will make the application even better and their customer service is absolutely the best I have encountered. I will be looking into other programs by Navimatics.
Basic
Pretty much basic. Should make controls more user friendly and add GPS input for time, LAT & LONG as an option. Lacks sight planner and basic navigational mathematics like rhumb line and great circle sailing. No option for imperial/metric input.
Finally
I'm a professional mariner and have been looking for an app for celestial navigation for a long time. This seems likes good start, I hope some updates will include sailings and compass correction. Although a little pricey, it's nothing compared to the $80 app. I gladly took a chance downloading this app, and so far looks good.
I'm a big fan of celestial navigation and I hope for generations to come this art will be passed on. Now that my cadet days are over, and I'm in the world of coastwise tankers I try to do celestial whenever possible to keep my skills toned. I can't wait to try out the app and compare to my long handed calcs.
Field ready and practical to use
First, my comments are based as a Prof Mariner w/ 18 years of ocean sailing, Academy grad, and current Cel Nav Teacher. Out of the box this app is easy to use, pages are laid out great. Data entry is easy to enter. Use the help section first and you have no problems, even though I went staight into it, it corrected the few wrong entries I made (on purpose), such as Lat & Long number configurations. Use the app in class to check USCG problems. Some differances found with resulting intercept distances, but explainable and sensible based on assumed DR Lat or DR Lat with course and speed. Initially had low memory problem on iP4, but Navimatics Tech support staff returned email off of their web site in less than 24 hours, answered question and apologized, what more can you ask for? I did not use TRIP page function, so can not comment on this page. Txt can be a bit small on iP4, but hey, screen is small, bet this app is awesome on iPad.
I have a few more suggestions to send them to make the app more informative, such as the ability to add Zone Discription and have Zone Time displayed in Sight and Almanac pages, but trival issues.
Only major addition I would like to see our SAILINGS, but only practical field use ones; Parrellel, Mercator and Great Circle Dist & Initial Course and Lat/Long Vertex points along GC route.
I highly recommend this app. A bit pricey, yes, but I feel worth it compared to a Nav Calculator or cost per hour doing cel nav reductions long hand in the field.