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When navigating do they use sideral time your standard time to find
longitude. I`am refering to the sextants. Thanks Craig |
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Craig wrote:
When navigating do they use sideral time your standard time to find longitude. I`am refering to the sextants. Thanks Craig UTC |
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Greenwich Mean Time (UTC).
Navigators have the Nautical Almanac and Air Almanac to tell them the altitude of various stars at various times and longitudes. As I understand it, the usual technique is this: (1) Estimate your position to about 1 degree, or find the nearest position listed in the almanac. (If several degrees off, don't worry; you can simply do the whole procedure twice for greater accuracy.) (2) Look up the altitude of a star at a particular time at that position. (3) At that time, measure its actual altitude from *your* position. (4) If it's off by N arc-seconds, you know you are on a line that runs perpendicular to the direction of the star and passes N nautical miles from the originally estimated position. (If the star is too high, the line runs between the est. posn. and the star; if too low, it's on the opposite side of the est. posn., away from the star.) (5) Do the same for another star in a different direction. Where the lines cross is your position. If it was a long way away from the estimate, do the whole procedure again starting from a better estimate. |
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![]() "Michael A. Covington" wrote in message ... (4) If it's off by N arc-seconds, you know you are on a line that runs perpendicular to the direction of the star and passes N nautical miles from Sorry, I mean arc-minutes. Sextants aren't *that* accurate! ![]() A nautical mile is an arc-minute on the globe of the earth. |
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Michael A. Covington wrote:
A nautical mile is an arc-minute on the globe of the earth. However, the earth is not a true sphere. It is flattened like a spinning top and has bumps and hollows like a potato. Thus there is no constant relationship between angle at the core and distance at the surface. A minute of arc at one point can be tens of metres different to a minute of arc at another. This uncertainty became unacceptable decades ago as navigation became more precise. The superceded definition remains a convenience, but the current definition no longer refers to angle. It is a fixed distance. 1 nautical mile = 1852 metres precisely http://www.bipm.org/en/si/si_brochur...r4/table8.html |
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PN From: (Pat Norton)
PN Subject: Navigation PN Date: 9 Nov 2003 06:36:41 -0800 PN Organization: http://groups.google.com PN PN Michael A. Covington wrote: PN A nautical mile is an arc-minute PN on the globe of the earth. PN PN However, the earth is not a true sphere. It is flattened like a PN spinning top and has bumps and hollows like a potato. Thus there is no PN constant relationship between angle at the core and distance at the PN surface. A minute of arc at one point can be tens of metres different PN to a minute of arc at another. PN PN This uncertainty became unacceptable decades ago as navigation became PN more precise. The superceded definition remains a convenience, but the PN current definition no longer refers to angle. It is a fixed distance. PN PN 1 nautical mile = 1852 metres precisely PN http://www.bipm.org/en/si/si_brochur...r4/table8.html All true enough. Yet, for sea navigation we let the Earth be a sphere and all the geometry is neat and clean. Note that more or less, the length of the nautical mile (one arc minute) makes one arcsecond equal to quite 30m. Many of us here have properties several arcseconds in size. --- þ RoseReader 2.52á P005004 |
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