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A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: AP terminology, WAS: 2-Body Fix -- take three
From: Peter Hakel
Date: 2009 Nov 12, 11:56 -0800
Circular LOP can be parametrized (i.e. "directly calculated") in a number of ways, Van Allen does it in 3-D, you and (Gauss) do it in 2-D, etc. The parameter can be anything that is not constant throughout the LOP (a meridian can be parametrized by latitude but not longitude) and which does not suffer from ambiguities. Since the celestial LOP is a circle, it can be parametrized, for instance, by azimuth at the GP, the circle's "center".
Before computers, none of this "direct computation of the LOP" was very practical. Thus eventually we got St. Hilaire with the AP. So let me restate my understanding of the AP concept:
I now think of the AP as the origin of a local coordinate system for a patch of Earth's surface that,
a) contains the ship's location, and,
b) is sufficiently flat and "zoomed in" in order to allow us to plot the relevant sections of the LOPs with acceptable accuracy.
Then the intercept distance and azimuth are like the magnitude and phase of a complex number. This local coordinate system is overlayed with the rectangular grid of parallels and meridians in the Mercator projection, which then can be used to extract the latitude and longitude of the fix.
In order to do anything, we need a coordinate system. Coordinate systems have origins. The AP is effectively an origin of a coordinate system that is very convenient for methods and technology of the 19th and early 20th centuries.
Peter Hakel
From: John Karl <jhkarl@att.net>
To: NavList <navlist@fer3.com>
Sent: Thu, November 12, 2009 10:28:05 AM
Subject: [NavList 10593] Re: AP terminology, WAS: 2-Body Fix -- take three
Peter & Lu,
We all agree on the definition of a fix, LOP, DR position, and EP.
But if AP is not the generic word for the location of the apex of the
St. Hilaire navigation triangle between the coH side and the coLat
side, what is that location called?? Is there no generic word for
it?? If we can't agree on the label for this point, let's call it the
"controversial Point", the CP.
Then, for List members, I can rephrase my favorite question: Why does
the St. Hilaire method use a CP instead of just calculating the LOP
directly? (I think Frank says there's no confusion on the answer to
this question.)
John
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From: Peter Hakel
Date: 2009 Nov 12, 11:56 -0800
John,
I'll try to summarize the way I understand this.
If we want to quantify (calculate) any geometric object (an LOP for example), we need to choose a coordinate system. We also need to have a way of measuring distances, which then allows us to put numbers on the axes. Coordinate systems have origins (reference points) which declare: "this is zero."
I'll try to summarize the way I understand this.
If we want to quantify (calculate) any geometric object (an LOP for example), we need to choose a coordinate system. We also need to have a way of measuring distances, which then allows us to put numbers on the axes. Coordinate systems have origins (reference points) which declare: "this is zero."
Circular LOP can be parametrized (i.e. "directly calculated") in a number of ways, Van Allen does it in 3-D, you and (Gauss) do it in 2-D, etc. The parameter can be anything that is not constant throughout the LOP (a meridian can be parametrized by latitude but not longitude) and which does not suffer from ambiguities. Since the celestial LOP is a circle, it can be parametrized, for instance, by azimuth at the GP, the circle's "center".
Before computers, none of this "direct computation of the LOP" was very practical. Thus eventually we got St. Hilaire with the AP. So let me restate my understanding of the AP concept:
I now think of the AP as the origin of a local coordinate system for a patch of Earth's surface that,
a) contains the ship's location, and,
b) is sufficiently flat and "zoomed in" in order to allow us to plot the relevant sections of the LOPs with acceptable accuracy.
Then the intercept distance and azimuth are like the magnitude and phase of a complex number. This local coordinate system is overlayed with the rectangular grid of parallels and meridians in the Mercator projection, which then can be used to extract the latitude and longitude of the fix.
In order to do anything, we need a coordinate system. Coordinate systems have origins. The AP is effectively an origin of a coordinate system that is very convenient for methods and technology of the 19th and early 20th centuries.
Peter Hakel
From: John Karl <jhkarl@att.net>
To: NavList <navlist@fer3.com>
Sent: Thu, November 12, 2009 10:28:05 AM
Subject: [NavList 10593] Re: AP terminology, WAS: 2-Body Fix -- take three
Peter & Lu,
We all agree on the definition of a fix, LOP, DR position, and EP.
But if AP is not the generic word for the location of the apex of the
St. Hilaire navigation triangle between the coH side and the coLat
side, what is that location called?? Is there no generic word for
it?? If we can't agree on the label for this point, let's call it the
"controversial Point", the CP.
Then, for List members, I can rephrase my favorite question: Why does
the St. Hilaire method use a CP instead of just calculating the LOP
directly? (I think Frank says there's no confusion on the answer to
this question.)
John
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Or post by email to: NavList@fer3.com
To , email NavList+@fer3.com
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